Hi Stephan, On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 11:40 AM, Stephan Assmus <superstippi@xxxxxx> wrote: > > Waldemar Kornewald wrote: > > An active, "hands dirty" community and frequent progress updates are > > probably a great way to attract more developers, but of course you can > > just be a "lean back" community and maybe get your R1 in 2014 (I actually > > believe it'll be in 2012) and your oh-so-great R2 in 2025, so you can > > sway in nostalgia while other people already use Minority Report-like > > interfaces. > > Oh you mean the one where you need to take a break every 3 minutes because > your arms hurt? And then need to take another break every 30 minutes > because you need to sit down for a change? :-) I just tried to find a popular example. I wouldn't want to work that way, either. Though, I'm sure it's great for your muscles. :) > :-) What if some people think that making these progress reports is not > "relevant" enough to attract actual developers? I'd rather have someone tell me so than not get any reply. Anyway, the point is that progress reports would be great for increasing interest in Haiku and if interest grows then my hope is that this indirectly increases attention among developers. > Instead, I believe that > Haiku will have to do this for itself: We seriously need the first alpha. Of course, but I doubt that this is the only way to attract more contributors. Having a working product (i.e., proving that Haiku is feasible) of course is an essential foundation, but there must also be increased awareness of Haiku. How many people in our forums report something like "This is the first time I've heard about Haiku ..." or "Wow, I thought BeOS is dead!"? Participating in open-source events/conferences is great for increasing awareness. Progress reports could help, too (which is why I suggested it ;). Also, showing more stuff that makes Haiku unique would be great (e.g., make the RFCs more accessible to show what the future might look like; BTW, I improved the Installer RFC). Otherwise it's just another one of those OS projects that add no real value compared to Linux, OS X, and Windows. So, does anyone have a few ideas on how to increase awareness and emphasize on Haiku's uniqueness? BTW, if someone disagrees with this, then feel free to reply. ;) Bye, Waldemar