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Linux Mint 19.2 'Tina' is On the Way, But the Developers Seem Defeated and Depressed (betanews.com)

Brian Fagioli, reporting for BetaNews: Today should be happy times for the Linux Mint community, as we finally learn some new details about the upcoming version 19.2! It will be based on Ubuntu 18.04 and once again feature three desktop environments -- Xfce, Mate, and Cinnamon. We even found out the code name for Linux Mint 19.2 -- "Tina." And yet, it is hard to celebrate. Why? Because the developers seem to be depressed and defeated. They even appear to be a bit disenchanted with Free Software development overall. Clement Lefebvre, leader of the Linux Mint project, shared a very lengthy blog post today, and it really made me sad.

He wrote, "For a team to work, developers need to feel like heroes. They want the same things as users, they are users, they were 'only' users to start with. At some stage they decide to get involved and they start investing time, efforts and emotions into improving our project. What they're looking for the most is support and happiness. They need feedback and information to understand bugs or feature requests and when they're done implementing something, they need to feel like heroes, they literally do, that's part of the reason they're here really."
Upon publication of the article, Jason Hicks, Muffin maintainer and member of the Linux Mint team, corroborated the claims made by others.

2 of 269 comments (clear)

  1. Re: For an immediate cheering up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think I'm beginning to see the problem.

    If you maintain a distro, you are under constant bombardment from complete fucking lunatics who hate systemd.

  2. Re:It is almost like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or maybe idealism drove a bunch of software developers to overwork themselves, and now they are experiencing burnout?

    Or maybe after a while of working for free, one starts to feel like one is being taken advantage of?

    Maybe software development, like any other kind of work, has a few projects that are fun and self-actualizing surrounded by plenty of tedious grudge work necessary to get anything actually working....and people need some concrete incentives to put up with all the grudge work?

    Nah, none of those explanations allow you to sit in moral judgement of people who are laboring on your behalf, in return for nothing from you.