Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? 223
underpar writes "This Techworld.com article reports that a UK group called the Open Source Consortium is being officially launched today. The article further states that the goal of the group is to respond to claims that switching to open source is more expensive than using Microsoft products and to help smaller companies compete with Sun and IBM for open source contracts. They say they will not compete with other open source groups and they intend to eventually come to the US. The hype-filled about us section of their site says their Quality Standard Certification provides a "simple framework for self-assessment and performance improvement." The question of whether this is useful or even wanted in the US still remains to be answered."
Dumb overgeneralization (Score:5, Informative)
Some open source projects do (carrier grade linux; linux in medical devices).
Others don't (screen savers, C# clones(to match MSFT's Quality Standards), etc)
Re:Dumb overgeneralization (Score:5, Insightful)
Linux in medical devices should have follow FDA standards
Linux in automotive systems shouldd follow DOT standards.
Linux in voting machines should follow Diebold/MS-Access quality standards..
(sorry for the US-centric examples - for your own country pick your favorite certification organizations)
Re:Dumb overgeneralization (Score:5, Interesting)
And those standards, would be... non-existant?
Re:Dumb overgeneralization (Score:2)
They must be very very very secu^H^H^H^H easy to steal the election with
Nobody says standards must be HIGH (Score:2)
"In the crapper" and "Runs once out of ten tries" are "quality standards" just not excessively hard to achieve.
Yea, that sounds funny, but I am not joking. If you have ever worked with government or mission critical systems you know that there are whole ranges of "quality standards" that properly hinge on all sorts of factors and properly "only go so far".
You have been conditioned to see those two words and automagically think nine-nines-of-uptime or zero-errors
Re:Dumb overgeneralization (Score:2)
Re:Dumb overgeneralization (Score:2, Offtopic)
20+ years ago, "Republican" was a party that held an ideology that included things like smaller government, less social services, etc. Yes, they were right-wing, but not to an extremist fashion.
Now, when you talk about the "Republican" party, you're probably talking about the neo-conservatives. This is not your father's Republican party. T
Re: (Score:2)
And a redundant idea to boot (Score:5, Insightful)
You need to be skilled in their "consulting framework" [openforumeurope.org] and you need to conform to some "financial framework" as well. Their membership criteria are mysterious (hint, you probably need to be a member of their club of buddies) and some of the organisations that are members (and knowing those organisations intimately, they probably are the drivers behind this thing as well) are decidedly dodgy - Open Forum Europe has publicly spoken as "Open Source Representatives" and as such, have signed a declaration supporting software patents [theregister.co.uk]. Looks to me like just another group of people trying to corner a market. Anyone remember the Open Group, and the "good" they did for UNIX? (another hint - a lot of the same people are involved)
This is so much the wrong crowd to hang out with....
This is more about "cover your ass"... (Score:2)
The other part to this is being able to make an elite club (ie those inside "quality" vs those "outside"). Such levels of exclusivity fly in the face of what Open Source stands for.
Very insightful, more comments (Score:3, Insightful)
Software should be held to whatever quality standards the customer requires, regardless of it's proprietary or open development process.
For products where quality IS important, published documentation, including source, code-change-history, published test-cases and results of running those tests cases, etc. can help ensure quality. Commercial outfits typically rely on
Re:Dumb overgeneralization (Score:3, Interesting)
Not that I think OSC does not have credibility - I just don't know about that - but am wondering as to who would bean counters trust more when they sign cheques?
Re:Dumb overgeneralization (Score:3, Interesting)
IF we all halt all software development TODAY. There is enough software to last till the next millenium. Everybody just rushes new versions out cause they could.
open source != linux (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:open source != linux (Score:2)
But see thats the beauty of free operating systems, and thats what scares Microsoft, and scared IBM, Novell, Sun into joining what they cant defeat. An opensourced OS can never really die.. they just live on with a smaller number of supporters until developers elsewhere feel their favorite OS is insufficient for their purposes, and join forces. In
I think they do... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I think they do... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I think they do... (Score:2)
Thankfully penguins are good swimmers. On the other hand, contrary to marketing, Windows XP does not, in fact, allow you to fly.
Chalk up another win for Linux.
Jedidiah.
Re:I think they do... (Score:2)
I knew the code acceptance barrier was high, but man, that is brutal
Re:Geek humor- fragile at best (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Geek humor- fragile at best (Score:2)
Yes. It's like ROT-13, except instead of being merely damp and mildewed, Pier 13 is all wet.
About Us page (Score:5, Funny)
We are a not-for-profit organisation which guarantees the the quality of open source deployments in the public sector (emphasis mine)
Re:About Us page (Score:3, Funny)
Re:About Us page (Score:2)
Re:About Us page (Score:5, Interesting)
validator.w3.org http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww .opensourceconsortium.org [w3.org]
gives this response:
This page is not Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional!
... and it ain't even slashcode ...
Re:About Us page (Score:3, Funny)
Re:About Us page (Score:2)
McHammer: Too Open To Standardize (Score:5, Interesting)
However, who is to set these standards and who is to govern them is another question.
I have a subtle feeling that Open Source = Freedom, that's probably why we see so many forks and distros because "I would have done this that way, and I could".
So what is to stop a "US Open Source Consortium" being officially launched tomorrow because another group of developers have different idea on Open Source's quality standards?
Can Linus the most influential man [slashdot.org] gives a single, authoritative guideline?
Re:McHammer: Too Open To Standardize (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:McHammer: Too Open To Standardize (Score:2)
It also looks like my days of receiving lucrative MS funding for using me as a case study to show that a single Open Source implementor is way more expensive than a dozen MCSEs are also numbered.
And to think, that MS was going to pay off my 3rd house and 2nd Porsche next week if only I would get up in front of national TV and announce how glad my company
Be Careful (Score:3, Insightful)
Something "free" or "cheap" might be so for a reason.
I still say best open source is that tied to proprietary hardware then you really cash in.
As for la-dee-dah software, operating systems, etc, I stay away from those.
Re:Be Careful (Score:2)
Huh? Please restate this and say from who's perspective this is the best. The seller? The buyer? Examples? Are you thinking of Apple?
Re:Be Careful (Score:3, Insightful)
I would call that FUD.
Just because it's free or cheap doesn't mean it's inferior in quality. Similarly, being expensive doesn't guarantee the quality would be good either.
Actually, for example, *BSDs are arguably the best network operating system and they are free. It is those overpriced proprietary OSes made by you-know-who that are riddled with bugs and security problems.
Software products do not suffer from resource scarcity like traditional commo
Questionable quality. (Score:5, Insightful)
More to the point, isn't ISO 9001 one of those standards where you prove your ``quality'' by committing to following a process, and documenting that you do indeed follow that process? The inevitable result is that you can commit to shooting your customer in the foot, and document that you have done so, and earn the highest ``quality'' rating for it. That sort of ``quality'' isn't very reassuring.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Questionable quality. (Score:2, Informative)
Sticking with the "ISO" flavour, ISO 9126 [cse.dcu.ie] defines software quality characteristics as Functionality, Reliability, Usability, Efficiency, Maintainability and Portability
Re:Questionable quality. (Score:2)
Re:Questionable quality. (Score:2)
Re:Questionable quality. (Score:2)
Wasn't it George Carlin who said: "We need quality control, after all who would want to have quality get out of control!".
Slow down cowboy (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't know much about Quality, do you?
I'll speak of these things in general, since they are essentially the same types of certifications (ISO, CMM, etc). If your customer agrees to be shot in the foot, and you shoot him in the foot, then the quality of that release is right on the money. One of the things that people miss (or fake) when implementing these processes is that they try to cut corners and fake-out the process. These certifications usually require that you get customer commitment to process changes. That means you keep your customer in the loop of communication. Therefore, you get them to agree to things and hold them to it. Customers don't usually like that, they love to wiggle and worm their way around commitments. But if you follow these processes, you can get them to document their commitment. They aren't very happy when they are called on the fact that they get exactly what they asked for, but in the end the point is to make them happy by getting them to ask for what they really want.
Everyone loves to put down things like the CMM and Six Sigma, because they "don't work". Just because you worked somewhere where it didn't work doesn't mean the models don't work, it means you didn't do them very well. And they aren't easy to do well, they take effort. Most places will cut corners and fake the behavior that they think will let them slide by to get a certification, then they will usually go right back to doing what they want. There is a difference to "getting to certification level X" and "operating at certification level X".
And the real definition of quality is the delta between what the customer expects and what is delivered.
No. (Score:2)
Re:No. (Score:2)
Not a problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
Even if OSS is better in a lot of cases, many managers can't politically afford to introduce it because of the climate that exists in the still largely Windows-controlled world.
Any sort of
You might start with the Debian Social Contract. (Score:2)
In a rational organization, the name means something because everyone knows that stuff from that company always rocks.
Debian is a good name and they have documentation to back up their processes. It should not be hard to turn that documentation into sound QC. The process already works and any rational organization should be able to point to it and say, "those guys
Six Sigma to the resuce!!!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
If you have had Six Sigma traning, then you are definitely baffled about what it is.
Re:Six Sigma to the resuce!!!!!! (Score:2)
Re:Six Sigma to the resuce!!!!!! (Score:2)
Re:Six Sigma to the resuce!!!!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
We weren't given the choice. :-(
So now I have to apply methods that were developed for the prodcution of millions of commodity items to my R&D development of unique and singular prototypes. Hah?
I am in Hell.
Re:Six Sigma to the resuce!!!!!! (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:3, Insightful)
Do bears shit in the woods?
Is the pope Catholic?
RE: Why would (Score:2)
YES, it does (Score:4, Informative)
Informative? (Re:YES, it does) (Score:2)
Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? (Score:2, Insightful)
And it needs to stick to them. Microsoft may produce buggy insecure code but I'm fed up of finding bugs in Open Source software and being told 'what do you expect, it's free'.
Ed Almos
Budapest, Hungary
Re:Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? (Score:2)
Some of the responses are just stupid, such as claiming that I don't know how to press the "+" key [slashdot.org], or calling me a troll. Hardly anyone--except Mac users--wants to acknowledge that my experience is real: Firefox is even more buggy than IE6 (my previ
Re:Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? (Score:2)
Some of the responses are just stupid, such as claiming that I don't know how to press the "+" key, or calling me a troll.
And what the heck do you expect people on Slashdot to do about it?
Did you try filing bugs in bugzilla to alert the Mozilla developers of these probl
Re:Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? (Score:2)
Well, what *do* you expect, given that it's free? Or more precisely, what do you expect a quality standards organization to do to address the issue? No organization would have the ability to compel developers to fix bugs or compel volunteers to do proper quality evaluations.
Re:Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? (Score:3, Insightful)
So you'd prefer to pay big bucks for your software instead, find bugs in it, and then be ignored when you complain to the software company?
Re:Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? (Score:2)
Where does that leave non-coders?
I didn't rtfa, but... (Score:3)
OSS still has a bit of a reputation of being "kids in basements wearing black t-shirts hacking out amateur software surrounded by Matrix screen savers" and not always undeservedly.
But not always deservedly either. And some sort of cert program (I leave to people smarter than I am the how, where, and when of certification) could be helpful. Would it make it more difficult for an innovative project to take root? Well, yes, but that would be the point, and it would guard against projects that are abandoned when, for example, their creators graduate from university.
I'm a big fan of Free software, btw.
Re:I didn't rtfa, but... (Score:2)
I guess I am so old that I remember when all software for microcomputers was hacked out by kids in in basements wearing "Art of Noise" t-shirts surrounded by DnD books.
Re:I didn't rtfa, but... (Score:2)
I'm not proud.. I'm just sayin'.
Anyway, there's some real genius in those basements (then and now), but to be a saleable product, there needs to be SOME sort of
...Matrix screen saver standard on QNX (Score:2)
Re:I didn't rtfa, but... (Score:2)
I keed, I keed...
(not really)
Linux _IS_ quality (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Linux _IS_ quality (Score:2, Insightful)
A 'quality standard' (Score:2, Informative)
We're talking about quality. How good is the finished product compared to its usage. Is a mission-critical application actually going to be stable? Does your application spend most of its time in spin locks? The quality is in the method of the implementation. A web server can answer HTTP requests without trouble, but will is do
Who's standards (Score:2)
I'm happy with the mindset of "other people use it so it must be pretty solid".
However, businesses don't really think that way. It makes sense to have a badge that individual distributions use that assures managers that it's reached a particular standard of quality.
Of course in practice that's highly non-trivial.
Re:Who's standards (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't spend my time reviewing others' code unless it is, for example, a smaller tool which is of importance (a third party suexec wrapper for example, or a rare Apache module from a less than perfect source).
My point was that:
1. We can if we want to. If something is that important, you at least take a quick look at it to see if any care was taken. This may be more so in smaller projects such as a perl script.
2. If you're not hiding it from other people, you're not ashamed of your potenti
Re:Who's standards (Score:2)
It would be nice however if there was an independant body who could certify application versions and kernels. They could assess reliability, interoperability and general code standards.
I know that's essentially what redhat do, but as more closed source linux apps and linux hardware come out, it'd be a bonus to be able to have an "Designed for Linux 2.6" badge and have an assurance that it'd all work.
Re:Who's standards (Score:3, Insightful)
There are security analysts who do spend time looking at the kernel, but it's a big job. As with most of these projects, they usually start becomes someone pays a security company to spend millions auditing it (ie: a government wanting to use it for sensitive data or voting machines). If only we could get every linux user to do one line of code *smirk*
BTW: FHS is an attempt at getting some standardiz
Needs vs. Shoulds vs. Could Haves, etc. (Score:5, Interesting)
Lots of people are quick to say that someone else's work "needs" something. My car needs its cupholder in a sane spot, instead of so it just about blocks the radio buttons. It's true, but that's not exactly a demand on the car maker. Just a hint
Sometimes it's hypothetical and prescriptive; "Red Hat needs to compete in the market X, so it needs to advertise in trade publication Z and add the de-pre-mux-defrobnostication patch that this special niche requires." Fine
Other times, the "need" is expressed as an imperative, when the speaker has no standing to demand anything ("The GIMP interface needs to change!") etc, or (as in the headline here) where there is no single Thing to change. "Open Source" covers a huge range; it's like "Things that have the letter R." It's true that some of these things (like Catherine Zeta Jones) are beautiful, but it it does not follow that all things with "R" better our existence in quite the same way.
It's perfectly nice and positive and welcome etc that someone has decided to promulgate what they consider higher standards of quality for "Open Source" -- as long as everyone realizes that only a certain subset of open source software can be scrutinized by any given such body, that developers may have their own ideas (even if they are not universally popular, and even if they have no intention of following someone else's ideas of UI perfection), that open source's great advantage in this context is that UIs are a) frequently separate from the underlying code and b) forkable.
timothy
Re:Needs vs. Shoulds vs. Could Haves, etc. (Score:2)
The problem here lies in the concept of "quality standards". That's almost a contradiction in terms. In essence Quality is a value judgement and cannot be standardized, only made an opinion. That doesn't mean
Re:Needs vs. Shoulds vs. Could Haves, etc. (Score:2)
I was rather surprised the other day to actually discover that my car does have cupholders... they weren't obvious... I only found them when I accidently pushed against what appeared to be a solid divider between the aircon and the radio and they pop
standards (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux passed TelecomCarrier Grade Reliability Test (Score:5, Informative)
nit-picking (Score:3, Insightful)
Heh... "QUALITY standards" or "quality STANDARDS"? (Score:2)
The Community chooses. (Score:5, Insightful)
I can imagine an organized group like this, though, would be excellent at answering issues like corporate generated FUD in an organized and coherent way. That's our big problem, we lack representation (not counting eccentric geniuses with big ZZ top beards).
Standards are needed (Score:2, Interesting)
"Badges? We don't need no stinking badges!" (Score:2)
We are a not-for-profit organisation which guarantees the the quality of open source deployments in the public sector by setting professional standards and bonding its members.
AFBCD (Another Fucking Barber College Diploma)
More info on stinkin badges [nyud.net].
From the aforementioned hype filled section: (Score:3, Funny)
SQA is needed. (Score:3, Informative)
SQA helps to validate the software whether it is developed up to certain acceptable standards like whether it's functioning the way it supposed to, does it go berserk and stop functioning after the user keys in certain kind of data, etc.
Just because a software is open source and free, I see no reason why the quality should be compromised especially the operating systems, office productivity and development tools.
And so I really feel this Quality Standard Certification is needed, I mean just look at the numbers of governments and organizations is using Windows OS despite it's many flaws compared to the number of Linux OS adoption. The reasoning for this that "Linux is harder to use" is lame - it's obviously because of it's reputation and that Microsoft gave "quality assurance" to their product. What about Linux? Is there concrete proof that Linux is better that will convinced the government and the organization that it is a better OS?
Standards will just slow the war down (Score:3, Insightful)
I think developers should continue to try new ideas and do it their way. If nobody likes their idea, their software won't be used and it won't matter.
The market will adjust. It may not be elegant or convenient to juggle several different packaging systems, for example, but people are doing it. Eventually, the best packaging system will come out on top because people chose to use it, not become some standards organization decided it was best.
These past few years of OSS have shown some pretty neat ideas in a short amount of time. I think it's going to improve at a faster rate in the next few years.
Quality standards are destructive (Score:2)
they don't have to be. (Score:2)
Does not validate... (Score:2)
Perhaps we should just leave the UK Public Sector (Score:2)
I'm glad to see the majority of posters so far have chosen to miss the point of the article, and to miss the point of the Consortium.
8^)
For what it's worth, the Consortium consists of 'close to the community' F/L/OSS businesses in the UK who have got together to promote FLOSS to the UK government and Public Sector.
How do I know this?
Because I started the process.
We have been communicating with various parts of the UK Gov and Public Sector for months. The International Secretary of Socitm
Just like ISO Certification (Score:2)
Then it's extortion by unelected, unregulated authority.
"If you have ISO certification, you'll be better than everyone else" quickly turns to "If you're not ISO certified, you'll be perceived as a fly-by-night operation."
Re:Just like ISO Certification (Score:2)
Re: Does Open Source Need Quality Standards? (Score:2)
Anyway, the resounding answer to this is an emphatic YES !!!
No, because no one will use them (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, if a programmer can't even put forth the effort to make autoconf work on more than one platform, then they won't have the time to spend on "quality standards." I've seen professional programmers spout "best practices" out of their asses for a long time, and, when it comes time to produce something, they are just as fast and loose as anyone. The reason: talk is cheap. quality is very hard.
Open Source needs code reviews (Score:2, Insightful)
Jokers are jokers (Score:2)
Envy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What the hell is this? (Score:2, Interesting)
... because it IS hype-filled. It's smells to high hell of another marketing scam. They want to be open - let them submit their standards (their "framework" and "certification" standards) to peer review. Show us the standards (or kindly fuck off :-)
Just look at their address:
A freaking PO Box. No "real" address. No phone number.
Re:What the hell is this? (Score:2)
Re:Piracy an option? (Score:2)
pissing off your major trading partners is bad for business.
Re:Piracy an option? (Score:2)
I think you answered your own ques
Re:F/OSS is better. (Score:2)
The usual phrase is "off the top of your head" not "out the top of your head". Also, WTFC? Are you a complete idiot?
I understood the grandparent's post to reflect a concern that PHBs would ignore actual quality and claim to meet some quality standard which may not correspond to code of high quality (defined in an appropriate manner depending on the use to which the code will be put).