This just in from Olero

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pilotboba
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Posts: 434
Joined: 05-Aug-2005
# Posted on: 06-Oct-2005 17:58:11   

swallace wrote:

My sense of OpenSource software is, you get what you pay for.

Found this old thread an just had to reply to this one.

You say "your sense." Have you ever tried:

NAnt NUnit Cruise Control test Driven log4net Subversion

???

These are high quality, open source dev tools that have (almost) an infinate ROI, since the cost to obtain is $0. Of course there is a cost to implement. But, I don't think the cost to implement Subversion would be any more than Source Safe, Vault, PVCS or any other commercial products.

As far as the other three, I don't think there are even any commercial competitors.

Also, NHibernate is going to be a strong O/R mapper. It actually already is, it just needs to mature a bit and be better documented.

BOb

Otis avatar
Otis
LLBLGen Pro Team
Posts: 39616
Joined: 17-Aug-2003
# Posted on: 06-Oct-2005 18:31:26   

pilotboba wrote:

swallace wrote:

My sense of OpenSource software is, you get what you pay for.

Found this old thread an just had to reply to this one.

You say "your sense." Have you ever tried: NAnt NUnit Cruise Control test Driven log4net Subversion ???

These are high quality, open source dev tools that have (almost) an infinate ROI, since the cost to obtain is $0. Of course there is a cost to implement. But, I don't think the cost to implement Subversion would be any more than Source Safe, Vault, PVCS or any other commercial products.

I have to say that Subversion comes with very decent documentation but the rest sux big time in the documentation department, perhaps Log4net does ok, haven't checked that. A quality product requires also a quality documentation. Subversion comes with a book, it's excellent written and an example for all. Sadly not all great tools come with that polish.

I think I know what Scott means with what he says. Lots of open source tools are great, but only a few are real product quality. There's a reason for that: to make a good functioning application a real product, you need to invest at least 50% more time than you already have.

That's not to say, the application sux, not by far. I mean: I use openoffice, testdriven (nunit), ndoc, subversion, vnc and some non-open source but free tools on a daily basis. Most of these tools work OK, otherwise I wouldn't use them. But if I look at them with a state of mind of a consumer, I'm not so sure I would pay money for them if they would charge money for them, except perhaps subversion, as it does have the polish of a commercial product.

Also, NHibernate is going to be a strong O/R mapper. It actually already is, it just needs to mature a bit and be better documented.

Heh simple_smile . 'going to be' and 'it just needs'... wink Everyone knows that, but do realize that to actually make that happen, a LOT of energy and talent has to be invested into the project. It not 'just happens' if you just continue working, you have to push real hard to get that extra polish, that extra sense of quality. I don't doubt NHibernate will become a big player, it just is a bit of an uncertainty for which target audience it will become a big player. The main issue is that they ported Hibernate 2.x, and the current Hibernate code is 3.x. So, IMHO it's a bit unclear what they'll do: migrate 3.0 code into their ported 2.x code or develop the stuff manually from now on. Either way, it will be a big effort and it requires a lot of time to get it right, plus documentation and examples require a tremendous amount of work, which is only doable if you get payed full time, otherwise it will take ages.

So, 'eventually' some tools will get to the level of quality that you can say:"this is a good product, it has everything". However most tools require extra time to make them useful, to learn the basics etc. Most O/R mappers for .NET suck from a product's perspective because for that reason: they're mainly developed for in-house usage, or by a student, and are given out for free or for a small fee, but aren't developed to become a real product from the start. So you end up with an application which is functionality wise OK, but hard to use (only the long-time in-house users know the real power and how to use it) and/or hard to understand, because documentation is limited. Of course, some tools are simply hard to grasp because the subject is hard or there is so much functionality you don't know where to begin.

Example: I first used Nant. But because the documentation was so incredible bad (none at all) and some silly examples to work with, it took me just too much time to get started and make it effective. Now I use finalbuilder. It's a commercial tool, it gets the job done and it took me a fraction of the time of what I spend with Nant.

I simply can't understand why people write software which is then released without documentation. Even LLBLGen 1.x (open source code generator) came with proper docs. Or my OpenGL graphics library DemoGL (http://www.sd.nl/demogl), also came with docs, examples etc. because (but that's perhaps me) I found it important that others could actually use it. Otherwise, why bother releasing it ?

Frans Bouma | Lead developer LLBLGen Pro
pilotboba
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# Posted on: 06-Oct-2005 19:27:59   

Otis wrote:

Otherwise, why bother releasing it ?

Because it still has value.

However, I do think the "value" you GET from open source is much more than the $ value you pay for it.

I don't disagree with anything you said above. But, if "you get what you pay for means"

$0 License cost = 0 Value product frowning

Then I disagree.

If it means that you don't get a fully polished, well documented (reference and howtos), and supported I do agree with that.

However, there are many products I have paid good money for that had crap for doc, no examples and the support was spotty at best. So, just cause you PAY for a product doesn't make it good. The corallary to that is, just cause a product is free (open source) doesn't make it bad.

BOb

Otis avatar
Otis
LLBLGen Pro Team
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# Posted on: 06-Oct-2005 20:56:45   

pilotboba wrote:

So, just cause you PAY for a product doesn't make it good. The corallary to that is, just cause a product is free (open source) doesn't make it bad.

I have to say, I have to agree with that simple_smile

Frans Bouma | Lead developer LLBLGen Pro
swallace
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# Posted on: 06-Oct-2005 20:58:17   

Frans, you said it better than I could. Thanks.

Non-licenses costs frequently outstrip the amount you pay for a product. This is what keeps mySQL, RedHat, and others in business. They make money from the implementation and support costs associated with keeping customers happy over the long run.

Software development is a collaborative effort, and product vendors are business partners. I take great care in choosing partners, and consider each software purchase the bringing on board of a partner, not the purchase of a product. So much so I created a website (http://www.developerfood.com - shameless plug) devoted to tools and vendors I like and recommend.

"Pay" includes stress from failure of partners to perform, time spent learning things that should have been documented, and lost customers from unanticipated interactions created from poorly implemented tools.

You'll pay for bad decisions in the ways above, or pay for good decisions with cash for product and/or support services. Either way, you'll pay, and you'll get what you pay for.

I also use open source products, just as I used the open source version of LLBLGen, and I pay for service and support beyond the $0 cost of the product, where available, because my customers are worth it. When there was no tool vendor to deliver the back-end services, I try not to use the open source product unless I am willing to "pay" in ways, like self-support, possibility of failure, etc.

I expect exactly what I pay for, and I get it.

In the instance of LLBLGen Pro I've gotten much more than I expected, however.

(but come to think of it, I was a beta tester and didn't pay for the product. So much for that analogy...)

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