Subject | Re: [Firebird-Architect] Why did Interbase lose out to Oracle? |
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Author | Helen Borrie |
Post date | 2010-04-11T03:10Z |
At 12:38 PM 11/04/2010, Jim Starkey wrote:
When Jim was active in Firebird development, he (like other active developers) had an honorary membership of the Firebird Foundation. "Honorary" has no semantic association with laurel wreaths: it means "free of the obligation to pay a membership fee". So, while Jim was active in Firebird development, he saved $300 a year on Firebird Foundation membership fees.
After Jim announced he would no longer be active in Firebird development, because he was developing a new backend engine for MySQL Enterprise (Falcon, I believe it was) his honorary Foundation membership was vacated...not because he was Jim, particularly, but because honorary memberships are *always* vacated when the developer retires from active development. He got the customary email informing him of the fact and inviting him to continue as a paying member. It was his choice not to - so he kicked himself out of the Foundation as well. If he ever returns to the Firebird Project as an active codeworker, his vacated FF membership is still sitting there, waiting for that day.
Jim pulled himself out of the project mailing lists. He also sent me a bunch of very insulting (and highly inaccurate) emails. Those actions were his choice, too.
That's all there is or was about it.
Helen
>Damage to Firebird was all self-inflicted. Oh, and kicking people outFor the record -- Jim was NEVER kicked out of the project. For reasons best known to himself, Jim made that story up. It seems he's still dining out on it.
>of the project for "anticipated future inactivity" (thanks Paul and
>Helen) didn't help, either.
When Jim was active in Firebird development, he (like other active developers) had an honorary membership of the Firebird Foundation. "Honorary" has no semantic association with laurel wreaths: it means "free of the obligation to pay a membership fee". So, while Jim was active in Firebird development, he saved $300 a year on Firebird Foundation membership fees.
After Jim announced he would no longer be active in Firebird development, because he was developing a new backend engine for MySQL Enterprise (Falcon, I believe it was) his honorary Foundation membership was vacated...not because he was Jim, particularly, but because honorary memberships are *always* vacated when the developer retires from active development. He got the customary email informing him of the fact and inviting him to continue as a paying member. It was his choice not to - so he kicked himself out of the Foundation as well. If he ever returns to the Firebird Project as an active codeworker, his vacated FF membership is still sitting there, waiting for that day.
Jim pulled himself out of the project mailing lists. He also sent me a bunch of very insulting (and highly inaccurate) emails. Those actions were his choice, too.
That's all there is or was about it.
Helen