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Miro Replies to Mambo Allegations

Rico! writes "Miro aka The Mambo Foundation has finally provided answers to some thorny questions and also fired back at the Rebel Developer Alliance." Here is the Slashdot story covering the original split where the developers all jumped ship.

74 comments

  1. Correct link by Karamchand · · Score: 4, Informative

    Correct link, since the link in the story is to the main page.

    1. Re:Correct link by PhilTaylor · · Score: 1

      Miro is the bad guys here - I should know I am an Ex-Core Developer of Mambo, I resigned when Miro last tried to take over mambo!

    2. Re:Correct link by Trepalium · · Score: 3, Informative
      The only mention I see of this is in the Ars Technica article which is rather sparse on details. Ars only mentions this prior dispute in one paragraph, and is devoid of any links to the full story. Here's what little Ars had to say about this:
      Mambo originated from an Australian company known as Miro who decided to open source their code by putting it up on SourceForge and licensing it under the GPL. The open source community got a nice CMS and Miro had the open source community patching and improving its CMS. Everything went swimmingly for a while until Miro decided that it was taking back "their" code. Access to the code was shut off and the community vociferously objected. Fortunately because the code was GPL'd, the open source community was eventually able to pressure Miro to fork the code. And thus Mambo was born.
      Either way, the last time Miro acted unilaterally in regards to Mambo, the developers objected, why did they think it would be different this time?
      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
    3. Re:Correct link by Earered · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, just to add fuel on the fire:

      Wasn't Manbo Open Source a GPL version of an old version of Miro's Manbo proprietary CMS?

      And when the Open version got so much plug-in Miro attempted to get the Mambo Open Source CMS API to match their last Mambo proprietary CMS API? Without results? (IIRC, one or two years ago, when I used Mambo open source for a website).

      As an user of this CMS, it feels like Miro mades some strange moves (they probably did not expect the sources of their old CMS to become something that could overshadow their own new CMS).

    4. Re:Correct link by mmjb · · Score: 1
      Mambo originated from an Australian company known as Miro who decided to open source their code by putting it up on SourceForge and licensing it under the GPL. The open source community got a nice CMS and Miro had the open source community patching and improving its CMS. Everything went swimmingly for a while until Miro decided that it was taking back "their" code.

      Miro's motives in GPL-ing Mambo in the first place is a puzzle if they wanted the open source development to assist their commercial product. Applying the GPL just let it out of the box, never to be recaptured as proprietary. Unless I have a very wrong understanding of the GPL (which I admit is not impossible).

      With the development team gone, now all Miro has left is the name, right? The name isn't worthless (far from it, I'm sure) but momentum is likely to be with the team rather than its old "sponsor".
    5. Re:Correct link by dnoyeb · · Score: 1

      I don't know. And why does he think the responses given are even remotely in his favor?

      He essentially gives reasons for what he did, but he never claims he did not do it.

      Lame. He suggedted that the devs did not get on the foundation because it would take them away from their programming work. Honestly, don't they deserve to be there even if they quit developing? Or is he saying programmers dont make management material?

      His whole reply was transparent.

  2. What do you prefer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    20 thorny questions with Miro
    or
    20 horny questions with Mira?

  3. A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by CyricZ · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    We are seeing a very socialist-corporate trend developing in the open source world. Projects that were developed by the community for the shared, collective benefit of the community are now getting involved with corporate shenanigans. Between this Mambo spat and the recently announced Mozilla Corporation, and Linus' trademark licensing of Linux, we are seeing a very real trend developing.

    Now, the real question is: is this good for the community? At this point, it is difficult to tell. What may be benign at this point may become very chilling in the near future, especially if intellectual property rights start geting involved.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    1. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by cahiha · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Now, the real question is: is this good for the community?

      As long as it is under a reasonable open source license, it doesn't matter: the non-corporate version will continue to be developed and enhanced as long as users want it.

      Remember: open source is the free market answer to corporate inefficiencies; it is succeeding because it is more efficient than proprietary software development.

    2. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by Gothmolly · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      "corporate-socialist" ?
      "chilling" ?
      "corporate shenanigans" ?
      vague reference to IP ?

      Who are you, the Guardian?

      Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. How many times have we all read this? And now he wants to enforce it.... and he's teh evil?

      I disagree with your assertion that the "real" question is "is this good for the community"? There is no such thing as a community, only a collection of individuals.

      --
      I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    3. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by Elixon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Now, the real question is: is this good for the community?

      Main purpose of the business is to generate profit. But "generate profit" should be read as "take money from somebody else". Take money from Mambo CMS users in this case.

      All the steps were heading to benefit the community in the past. Now all the steps will lead to benefit an investor on the first place and the remaining benefits will be granted to the community. Satisfy community as much (and not more) to don't let community members "defect".

      Mambo CMS community will benefit because the earnings of the investor is dependant on the Mambo CMS community happiness. But Mambo CMS community will not benefit as much as it would without an investor.

      --
      Well, I've got to get back to work. When I stop rowing, the slave ship just goes in circles.
    4. Re: A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Insightful


      > We are seeing a very socialist-corporate trend developing in the open source world. Projects that were developed by the community for the shared, collective benefit of the community are now getting involved with corporate shenanigans.

      Would you mind explaining why the word "socialist" appears in that sentence?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    5. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by n0-0p · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I really have to ask for some clarification on what exactly you think you're talking about? You've referred to three situations that share almost no commonality and then throw some random thought at the end about IP. And where does socialist angle possibly fit into this at all? The thing that bothers me more than your post is the fact that someone modded you up. So in the spirit of being properly informed, allow me to sum up these issues for you.

      Mozilla Corporation - Mozilla has a historically commercial background and their more corporate approach to open source should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with their history. The formation of Mozilla Corp should in no way change the direction of the project, and it's not that uncommon of an approach for a non-profit to take.

      Linux Trademark - Linux is trademarked to prevent the FUD campaigns under the Linux name, which is unfortunately a growing problem. The costs for licensing are small (from $200 to a max of $5000 for multi-million dollar corps) and only exist to support the maintenance and defense of the trademark.

      Mambo - Seems like a straight split because of developer differences. It's a GPL'd project so they can fork and have at it.

      In all of these cases the status of the code has not been changed from open source. In fact, the terms of the licenses for all the projects prohibit them from ever trying to "retract" the released source.

      In the future please perform a little research and analysis to avoid spreading this type of misinformation.

    6. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by grahamlee · · Score: 4, Funny
      There is no such thing as a community, only a collection of individuals.

      You are Margaret Thatcher and I claim my five cartons of free school milk.

    7. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      man dont feed the gothmolly troll.

    8. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by ElvenMonkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      and Linus' trademark licensing of Linux, we are seeing a very real trend developing.
      Linus's trademark licensing of Linux is merely a protection to counter offensive marketing by other 'non-OSS friendly' corporations. Its' like some music artists that copyright their songs, but make them available free for anyone to perform or use, just with permission. The main purpose of the copyright is not to make money, but to ensure that the lyrics are used in the context the writer chose. This is no different, the trademark is not to 'cash in' on its popularity at all, but to control the way the brand name is used.
      Your methodology of posting is very interesting, taking unconnected events of minor consequence, trying to push some relevancy through to a reference to IP, which is yet another issue entirely. From the article itself, the Mambo Foundation has been granted an irrevocable, perpetual, royalty free licence, thus negating any issues with IP.

      --
      "Joy is not in things; it is in us." Richard Wagner
    9. Re: A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Because using that word gets one moded up.

    10. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      silly mods - that wasn't a troll, that was an insightful comparison to an historic figure.

    11. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by KudzuKat · · Score: 1
      But "generate profit" should be read as "take money from somebody else".
      Oh, spare me... "generate profit" should be read as "provide goods or services in which people see value and for which they are willing to pay". The corporations are not stealing money from your wallet or raiding your bank account. They are not "taking" money... they are "earning" it.

      This is no different than your "taking" money from an employer in return for the work you do.

      I applaud the folks who accept compensation other than money for their work (the satisfaction of helping others, the approval of their peers, the basic fun of solving the problem at hand, whatever), but I don't accept that there's thievery at work whenever a corporation generates a profit.

      Yes, it would be nice if all things were available to all people at no cost. But that's not the way things are. In the case of Mambo, it appears that we'll now see two diverging development paths. The competition between the two groups will probably lead to a better product. That does benefit the community, even if one development branch is not quite as free as it once was.
    12. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Oh, spare me... "generate profit" should be read as "provide goods or services in which people see value and for which they are willing to pay". The corporations are not stealing money from your wallet or raiding your bank account. They are not "taking" money... they are "earning" it.



      Can you spot the difference?

      A) Hi, we're here to offer you a license for that community developed product you're using. It's only $1000.00 per user per year. This license will keep our lawyers from coming and taking everything you have. That's great value.

      B) Hi, we're here to offer you a membership in our protection service. It's only $1000.00 per employee per year. This membership will keep our enforcers from coming and burning everything you have.

      The difference is that the protection racket will most likely spend the money in their local community, while the IP racket most likely will not.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    13. Re: A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will you stop posting already! I have seen better commentary from a Magic 8 Ball! You are the stupidest waste of flesh ever to walk the face of the earth. Did your mother drop you on your head when you were younger!?

    14. Re:A socialist-corporate trend is developing. by Elixon · · Score: 1

      I disagree.

      PROFIT + REAL COST = PRICE

      REAL COST is what you "earn" - price of the inputs (your time + material + education etc.)

      PROFIT is the extra money that you didn't work for. This is the money that somebody else worked for and he/she was so fascinated by your product that he/she decided to give the profit-money to you :-)

      --
      Well, I've got to get back to work. When I stop rowing, the slave ship just goes in circles.
  4. Mambo allegations? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe. But does he have an answer to the Zombo allegations?

  5. Is it an open source businessmodel? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1: Make free software.
    2: ?
    3: Write a reply to the Rebel Developer Alliance.
    4: Profit!

  6. Mambo? by woah · · Score: 1

    So, ehm.. did he have to do a mambo to refute the allegations?

  7. So. . .Miro gutted? by Limburgher · · Score: 4, Interesting
    My impression is basically that the core devs were unhappy with Miro and left, intending to fork. Is Miro's main beef that the Miro fork wil die while the Rebel fork will survive, making Miro the victim of essentially a brain drain? If Miro's stated objective is the continued survival of Mambo, what's the big deal? Mambo survives, and maybe Miro becomes irrelevant. Ideally, this shouldn't bother the folks at Miro, since the core devs are still in essence working on Mambo.

    Just my $0.02.

    --

    You are not the customer.

    1. Re:So. . .Miro gutted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The key crux of the matter is simply the copyright. The company didn't cede copyright of the code to the open group, which means they can do whatever they want with the code (combined with the fact that anyone contributing to the core must at least share copyright).

      When the devs fork the project, they will not hold copyright to the code, even tho it is GPL. Thus that group will only have access to the GPLd version, and no one will be able to make a closed source fork of the source base, since they're probably not get consent of all of the contributors.

  8. For those who don't know what mambo is... by WTBF · · Score: 4, Informative
  9. Fork, and rename by Animats · · Score: 3, Funny
    If the developers are going to fork, they should probably rename the product. "Mambo" is too generic. Something containing "Portal" would be more appropriate.

    "Webportal" is not a registered trademark.

    1. Re:Fork, and rename by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only should they rename it, they have to since Mambo is a registered trademark.

    2. Re:Fork, and rename by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 3, Funny
      Not sure why this scored funny, but I think it's an interesting thought for open source software. What would happen when open-source software would just start using generic names that absolutely cannot be trademarked. Given the nature of open source, having or not having a trademark is fairly irrelevant, so why not use this. I can see it now:

      Mambo renames to webportal

      firefox renamed to browser

      openoffice renamed to:

      word processor

      spread sheet

      etc.

      linux (and(!)/or BSD) renamed to 'operating system'

      This is going to be a ball!

    3. Re:Fork, and rename by JanneM · · Score: 1

      Sounds good - except that all of those are easily trademarkeable in any country using a language other than English. And of course, the names won't sound generic in any other language either.

      Of course, you could have all software have different names depending on the country. Won't it be fun for the english-speaking developers to figure out what the "kalkylblad" bug is all about?

      Oh, and who decides what software gets to have the generic title? Or will they all have the same name - is "spreadsheet" openoffice or gnumeric?

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    4. Re:Fork, and rename by jleq · · Score: 1

      I actually think that would be a good idea. It would be a lot easier to sell "Mozilla Browser" to someone than "Mozilla Firefox", although Mozilla itself is kind of an odd name. I love Firefox, but I can't even count how many times I've gotten a very odd look, followed by: "You want to deploy a program called Mozilla Firefox to all of the mission critical workstations? HA!"

    5. Re:Fork, and rename by Minwee · · Score: 1

      And all the restaurants can be named Taco Bell.

    6. Re:Fork, and rename by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      But what about the 3 seashells?

  10. Mambo. It's Just Like Zombo! by Orion83 · · Score: 0

    If Mambo is anything like Zombo http://www.zombo.com/, you can do anything you want... the only limit... is yourself.

    1. Re:Mambo. It's Just Like Zombo! by qaq · · Score: 1

      Well with all developers gone it most likely will be like zombo.com

  11. Explain your misunderstanding of its use. by CyricZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Perhaps we'd get further if you explained why exactly you fail to understand its use in that sentence.

    Put simply, we are seeing a combining of a form of socialism (as displayed by many open source projects) with the practices and philosophies of the corporate world. Hence the term "socialist-corporate". Not very difficult to comprehend, my friend.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    1. Re:Explain your misunderstanding of its use. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently it is, for he got moderated up to the maximal theshold. Slashdot certainly is getting dumber ...

    2. Re:Explain your misunderstanding of its use. by teknomage1 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we'd get further if you explained why exactly you fail to understand its use in that sentence. Put simply, we are seeing a combining of a form of socialism (as displayed by many open source projects) with the practices and philosophies of the corporate world. Hence the term "socialist-corporate". Not very difficult to comprehend, my friend.

      I believe he's implying that the rest of the sentence suggests that corporations are cashing in on community projects, therefore eliminating any sort of socialist element.

      --
      Stop intellectual property from infringing on me
    3. Re:Explain your misunderstanding of its use. by CyricZ · · Score: 1

      I believe he's implying that the rest of the sentence suggests that corporations are cashing in on community projects, therefore eliminating any sort of socialist element.

      But then we have something like the Mozilla Corporation, which was formed by the project itself. So we're having socialist, community-based projects drawing from corporate culture. The projects themselves are voluntarily promoting the melding of their socialistic attitudes and practices with those of corporations and Big Business. It's not really a matter of businesses hijacking an existing project and using their financial clout to basically take it over.

      --
      Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    4. Re:Explain your misunderstanding of its use. by HiThere · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Socialist is one of those words that everyone has some definition for, and the ways of reconciling the definitions are obscure.

      Perhaps his definition of "socialist" has something to do with statist based humanitarianism? Many people seem to have something like that in mind (some pro, and some con).

      I acknowledge that I don't really understand what socialist is doing in that sentence, but that's because I never know what someone is talking about when they talk about socialism. Remember that socialist has been used to describe everything from the Nazi party through the US dept. of Indian Affairs...and on through the government of Sweden. Finding a common meaning in that morass is beyond my limited capabilities...but it does seem to have something to do with governments.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  12. Hm. by Elixon · · Score: 1

    http://ricshreves.net/content/view/116/47/

    "Miro's role in the Foundation was to pay for its establishment." = Investment? Charitas?

    "fees for 3rd party developers are set at US$1,000 per year" = aka Microsoft certified developers?

    "Rules also need some kind of consequence for not following them, or they become ineffective." = Free software is just about freedom, heh?

    Mambo Steering Committee without Core Developers? So it will not be the Development Steering Committe, right? Is it Business Steering Committee then? ...

    Hm. Looks like somebody tries to capitalize the Mambo CMS potential. Is it the Mambo comunity who will profit on it? I don't think so.

    --
    Well, I've got to get back to work. When I stop rowing, the slave ship just goes in circles.
  13. Via via by bbc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As an entrepeneur who uses Mambo commercially, I find it odd, to say the least, that Miro have been acting dumb on their websites. Of course, one should not needlessly frighten one's customers, but if your top developers run away, at least some assurance that business will continue as usual would have been nice.

    Now they are pretending that nothing has happened. Does the emperor really expect us not to notice his lack of clothes?

    It would have been better if Miro had responded directly, rather than via 3rd parties.

    1. Re:Via via by jschmeling · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If they respond then they give both visibility and credibility to the developers, and not everyone understands the nuts and bolts of how the development is done. Ignorring this ensures that only some people, those who pay attention to development and the community, know about the split, while discussing it on their site will ensure that decision-makers also are aware of the problem. So, it's unlikely that they will visibly respond on their site, at least not until they notice they are losing their audience. (Which may happen, this community is fairly vocal.)

    2. Re:Via via by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As an entrepeneur who uses Mambo commercially.."

      WOW everyone an entrepeneur.. WOW!!

  14. Mods don't care about content... by bhsx · · Score: 1

    He spelled benign correctly. Therefore he gets positive mods! You new around here?

    --
    put the what in the where?
  15. Best thing Miro could do now by Qbertino · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The best thing Miro could do now is an all-out backpedal with appologies to the core developers of Mambo, a redo of their fondation rules and a free beer for all core participants at the next Mambo convention.
    Right now _everybody_ is looking at this and it is ultra-evident that Miro did a big screw up. The interview emphasises this once again.
    The way this whole foundation was built is just plain silly. The conditions for joinging are simular to SCO licences and that tells a lot.
    Unless the core team really screws up with their successor, this can only turn out bad for Miro. If they don't admit a mistake and see the utter insult their foundation rules are to core developers they will disappear into insignificance in less than a year.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:Best thing Miro could do now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except no one really cares all that much about that bloated piece of crapware, Mambo. Real developers and designers continue to develop great websites without the aid of this decade's PHPNuke turd.

    2. Re:Best thing Miro could do now by KriKit · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I beg to differ. Mambo offer's an opportunity for smaller guys to easyly create a website who would otherwise need to pay a "real" developer obscene somes of money.

    3. Re:Best thing Miro could do now by rdean400 · · Score: 0

      Miro is clearly in the wrong, but the Developers did little to help matters. The way to deal with idiocy is not idiocy.

  16. Mambo Foundation Membership Contract (paraphrased) by Qbertino · · Score: 2, Funny

    I hereby hand over to henchmen on Miro payroll (aka "Foundation Administrators") the exclusive total and unrevocable ownage of my ass - and everything attached to it.

    I am aware of the fact that this blessing costs me an anual fee of mere 1000$ (US). Which is so totally a once-in-a-lifetime super-bargain, since now above mentioned henchmen will give me an acknowledging nod and a pat on the head whenever I make an improvement suggestion for Mambo.

    signed

    Stupid Me

    (currently residing in Dads basement)

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  17. Miro and the community by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    7. The Terms & Conditions for membership provide for a number of penalties which can be invoked against members who run afoul of the rules -- including monetary penalties. What is the thinking behind this? Give me some examples of when those might be invoked.

    In order to build real community, there has to be community rules and guidelines. Rules also need some kind of consequence for not following them, or they become ineffective. Our goal is to make the environment as effective as possible. An Open Source project has to deal with issues from bad forum behavior to vendor / customer performance issues, (in the case of commercial third-party developers). Our rules directly reflect other Foundations and we built a rule-set around universally adopted procedures.

    Oh how I want to be a part of that community...

  18. Just as I suspected, the renegades are whining by Serveert · · Score: 1

    flying-off-the-handle reactionary angry programmers:


      Did the Development Team give warning of this action or seek compromise prior to publishing the Open Letter?

            No, the notice was their first and only action.


    Sad.. this could have been solved if they would have communicated to management, if things didn't happen then they could go public. As is they're just being self-absored primadonna attention whores, eliciting thousands of posts from people around the internet. This could have been solved if they weren't so full of themselves and knew how to communicate.

    OTOH, management could have paid more attention to the developers regarding their thoughts on the appointment process. If they had just said what they are now telling everyone then this could have been solved.

    It is sad this this has become so high profile. They're just airing their dirty laundry and it is not necessary.

    --
    2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    1. Re:Just as I suspected, the renegades are whining by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      It is sad this this has become so high profile. They're just airing their dirty laundry and it is not necessary

      Evidently you did not read the interview.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    2. Re:Just as I suspected, the renegades are whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The onus was on Miro to involve the Mambo community prior to changing everybody's world. Did Miro do this? No. Did people freak out at the sudden realignment of their world? Of course they did.

      And being required to pony up US$1,000 for the privilege of participating in what was previously an free and open development community is ridiculous. That's a business model that puts the screws to people who aren't necessarily going to have deep pockets: high schoolers and college students, for one.

      Will this change? Maybe- there may be organizations that form to pony up the $1K, receiving contributions from developers.

      Finally, that Miro surprised everyone by unilaterally announcing that everything is now different, is the cause of all this. That you call the core devs "primadonnas" shows you're either close to Miro, or that you're know nothing about which you speak.

    3. Re:Just as I suspected, the renegades are whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      blah blah blah "it was their fault they did it, evil meanies boo hoo"

      just say simply, 'change or we leave.' No more problem.

  19. Or try other dance themes.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .... like Salsa, Waltz, Two-Step, etc.

    Or the one I can't spell, Merengay.

    I think Fandango is already used for something.

  20. Oh no! by cpugeniusmv · · Score: 1

    [...] and also fired back at the Rebel Developer Alliance.

    That blast came from the Death Star! That thing's operational!

    1. Re:Oh no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ees not working?

  21. Wow, their answers sure don't help. by Anthony+Boyd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So I read the 20 questions and answers. I'm also slightly involved with Mambo -- not as a developer, but as a contractor who gets paid to deploy Mambo for companies. So I've seen the community at work, and I think I have a handle on it (though admittedly from an outsider's perspective).

    All I can say is, wow. If Miro thought the publication of those answers would paint them as reasonable, they've really lost it. They start out sounding cool & collected, but quickly veer into crazy-town. For example, question #8 asks why no developers are on the Board. Their answer is OK at the start, basically "hey, Andrew and Brian from the dev team were going to be on board." If that's all you read, they sound fine. But they go on to admit that they later decided -- for the developers, without input -- that the Board was too much for them. Solution? They decided to have no devs on the board.

    And just like that, their answer has gone from cool & collected to an admission of stupidity. They're not stupid to think that being on the Board is tough, mind you. It probably is, and it probably does mean that any developer on the Board would have little time left to BE a developer. But they are stupid to think that they would determine what is "too much" on their own, without allowing the developers to decide their own fate, and doubly stupid to think that the only solution is to choose one or the other. There must be dozens of possible ways to compromise or collaborate.

    What else? Let's see. Although they don't explicitly list the names of people who it will apply to, they do state that core team developers must also be members. And guess what? Members can be penalized financially if they break Miro's rules. Isn't that a whopper of a chilling effect on development? I sure as hell won't volunteer my time on a project that will bill me if I'm deemed to be "too rude" on the forum, or whatever their rules are.

    It's bizarre to me to think that anyone could expect something like this would go over well with the volunteers. It's no surprise to see nearly every major code contributor walking away from Miro. Anyone who stays has to be wealthy, out of it, or completely passive and compliant.

    Miro, from one "project leader" to another, all I can say is that I'm happy -- thrilled -- when someone contributes code to my projects. I can't imagine erecting all these hurdles. I can't imagine treating volunteers like 5-year-olds, who need "consequences" for their naughty behavior. If bad behavior is a problem, the correct course of action is to cut ties with that developer. Grow up.

  22. Well, this is going nowhere by khendron · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not that there was much doubt as to this happening, but this issue has officially devolved into a "did not, did too, he said, she said" issue.

    All the users of Mambo can really do now is sit back and see which group delivers a better product.

    --
    Life is like a web application. Sometime you need cookies just to get by.
  23. "webportal" can't be an RTM by pbhj · · Score: 1

    You can't get a registered trade mark (RTM) (in UK at least, and so I guess Europe too) for a generic term.

    Webportal is a generic (descriptive of the tech.) term.

    Macdonalds can't RTM the word "beefburger" because it describes the goods. An RTM is a reference to the origin of goods, hence "Big Mac" is fine as it has nothing to do with beef burgers.

    Get it?

    So, web portal can't be an RTM (but a specific font layout could be, I think). "beefburger" could be registerd for a web portal though, as it's not descriptive in that field.

    1. Re:"webportal" can't be an RTM by OldeClegg · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but the point of the parent is that the name does not need to be trade marked, at all. It's not being sold, after all.

      I think it's a very interesting idea. It could actually reinforce the drive to standards.

  24. And for More on the Whole She-bang by sjvn · · Score: 2, Informative

    from both sides see:

    Mambo Executives, Developers Fight for Project Control

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1850298,00.as p

    Steven

  25. Look in the mirror, Miro... by lonemamber · · Score: 0

    Howdy,

    Seems to me this is a clear cut case of the pot callin' the kettle black. Surely only the most uninformed would fall for such an obvious ploy as this so called interview.

    This Ric Shreeves happily posted on the new home of the project formerly known as Mambo (http://forum.opensourcematters.org/) about his 20 questions article, claiming to be objective and neutral in this here matter.

    Seems quite likely from the plugs he's been givin' it since that this is not the case at all, don't it?

    So Mr. Shreeves, prove that ya'll are not just a part of Miro's ol' boys club, or be seen as the snake that you seem to be.

    Why, such rampantly unashamed propaganda makes me ill to the stomach.

    That's comin' from one who would know, pilgrim.

    For those of ya'll that would like the lowdown on the story so far, as well as updates surely when more news come to hand, mosie on over to http://lonemamber.blogspot.com/, and then I suggest paying Mr. Shreeve's so-called interview a visit and givin' the man a piece of ya mind.

    Thankye kindly for perserverin',

    The Lone Mamber

    p.s. Why not even that Brian Connolly snake got a slashdot to his propaganda, whatever is happenin' here?

  26. Re:Mambo Foundation Membership Contract (paraphras by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're handing them your ass, isn't that $1000 an anal fee?

  27. Similarities to Sun by subStance · · Score: 1

    It's interesting how this kind of "Community, but if you get out of line, we'll bite you" style of OSS product management is evil when seen in the context of a GPL product, yet no-one objects even slightly to the fact that Sun has been doing this to Java for years.

    Before you can release any java code that implements java.* packages, there are non-disclosure agreements and compliance contracts you have to sign, so that you can't tell anyone about the horrors they will inflict on you if you release something that doesn't comply.

    And Sun still enjoy the image of a "friend" of open source ... ah the power of marketing.

    --
    Servlet v2.4 container in a single 161KB jar file ? Try Winstone
    1. Re:Similarities to Sun by steve_l · · Score: 1

      yeah, but at least we can say bad things about sun and not get fined :)

      You dont need to sign NDAs to implement the Java APIs, but the conditions say "dont add or remove anything", primarily to stop MS subverting it again. What you do need NDAs for is for the test kit to prove compliance. NDAs and OSS are so incompatible it hurts -you cannot discuss what tests are failing on a public mailing list, which is silly.

    2. Re:Similarities to Sun by subStance · · Score: 1

      Ah but you do need to sign an NDA ... because the conditions on the license for distributing the APIs say that you're not allowed to release anything that implements the APIs without passing the TCK. I got pulled up on this by a Sun staff member when releasing my servlet container implementation.

      Couldn't agree more though otherwise about NDAs.

      --
      Servlet v2.4 container in a single 161KB jar file ? Try Winstone
    3. Re:Similarities to Sun by steve_l · · Score: 1

      aah, forgot about that bit of bollocks.

      Overall, I think the whole TCK stuff sucks. Secret compliance tests indeed. How can I make my own redist of something like Axis (with javax.xml classes) without making the statement about compliance, and how can I do that without the TCK.

      We need to do better. That is why things like ruby and python appeal to me: no sun in charge. And the grid related standard that I am working on? Its test suite is BSD-licensed and hosted on sourceforge; part of the gump nightly build.

  28. Mod Parent Up... by Orrin+Bloquy · · Score: 1

    ...so I can get my monthly sponsorship to TotalZombo.com.

    --
    "Made up/misattributed quote that makes me look smart. I am on /. and I must look smart."