Two Years of Unmaintained Free Software
1) What is Unmaintained Free Software?
Unmaintained Free Software is a database of orphaned or unmaintained Free Software related projects, i.e. projects that aren't developed any longer and have no maintainer.
A project is considered unmaintained, if
- the author says so on the project's homepage or on a mailing list etc.
- there hasn't been any activity (releases, CVS, mailing lists, homepage, etc.) for a long time. In that case, someone (read: me) emails the author and asks about the status of the project. If I don't get an answer within two weeks, I usually add the project to the site.
For more information about the site, please read the About page...
2) History
I wrote the very first version of the site in late 1999. At that time the project was called Unmaintained Linux and consisted of nothing more than a few static HTML pages. In April 2000 I rewrote the whole thing using PHP for the code and MySQL as the database backend and called it Unmaintained Free Software. There have been quite a few changes since then, read below.
3) Features
Some features which I have added since version 0.1 include:
- A (quite simple) search box.
- A Show-A-Random-Unmaintained-Project box.
- "Slashboxes" for Freshmeat, Newsforge and - you guessed it - Slashdot.
- The news (new projects, updated projects) are also available as an RSS feed for automated processing. You can also get the whole database dump , if you like.
- Lots of statistics are available, e.g. Top 10 licenses, Top 10 programming languages, Top 10 reasons why projects become unmaintained, Top 10 search query strings, etc. etc. Read the Statistics Page for details.
- Lots more. Read the ChangeLog .
Oh yes, did I mention that the code behind the site is GPL'd? No? Oh well, stupid me ...
4) Statistics
I already mentioned the Statistics Page . Here's a small overview of where we stand today ...
As I am writing this, there are 133 projects listed as unmaintained on the site. Among the still unmaintained projects are lots of small or unknown projects, but there's also a lot of quite "high-profile" projects which are unmaintained, e.g. GLchess , Golgotha (Remember? It's that RTS game started by crack.com), GTKsee , gv and finally (sadly) icewm .
Some of those projects which have already found a new maintainer include fakebo , Jump'n'Bump , TortoiseCVS and UML Sculptor . All in all, 30 projects have found a new maintainer already, the rest is still waiting for some talented coder to adopt them (hint, hint) ...
5) Call for help
I want YOU for Unmaintained Free Software!
There's lots of possibilities how you can contribute:
- Spot unmaintained projects and add them to Unmaintained Free Software.
- Even more important: Adopt unmaintained projects and continue their development!
- Send suggestions, report broken links, file bug-reports, fix bugs, send patches for the code etc. etc.
6) The End
So that's the end of my small article. Hope you liked it.
If you have questions about Unmaintained Free Software, or would like to contribute some time to the project, comments are welcome.
Click preferences on the menu at the left, then check "Collapse Sections." Then click "Save."
"As a former author of an open source project some of these projects should reamin dead."
Well, if they should, they probably will. Others, like icewm, will find new owners because their time has not yet come, and the users of the software desire to keep it alive. I think this site embodies the heart of the GPL... Software doesn't need to die just because the owner no longer has time/interest to invest in the project.
Nothing to see here. Move along.
Well, it's listed as "Reason :: Project is obsolete :: There are better alternatives"
There's nothing wrong with listing it as unmaintained, though. No one says that all of these projects should live one, but if you start excluding projects from the database because someone thinks they shouldn't live on, wouldn't that limit the usefulness of the database?
Note that finding new maintainers isn't the only possible use of the database, it could e.g. also be used when you're planning to start a new project to find out what mistakes similar projects made that caused them to fail. Of course, that requires appropriate documentation, but at the very least you can look at the projects to get some ideas for your own one. And maybe, though less likely, you can even find a codebase from which you can move on.
Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
I think something like http://bleachedmeat.org would be a good domain name for a site like this. Much easier to type!
But is it maintained?
Sorry, couldn't resist.
-"Zow"
Another good reason for a list is when researching a project or problem you find an obscure Usenet posting on Google refering to a project and further searching doesn't turn up anything. Finding it in a database like this quickly lets you know the status and whether it is going to solve your particular problem.
Bleh!