Batman wrote:
@jope
First, Theo is not a troll, he's the boss of the OpenBSD project. Read his website: http://www.theos.com/ :-D
Second, Theo is questioning only about Genesi's "customer care". Basically he's alerting everyone to not make his very experience with BBRV. Well, he has a somewhat flaming way of express himself, but when he talks, he talks with reason. Why don't ask him, via misc-openbsd mailing list, the same questions you asked me? I'm sure he will have some interesting answer.. ;-)
If there was an experience with BBRV... Hoo-boy, especially as all the visible efforts really did look positive on that front.
Basic rules of the game:
-If you want to work with OpenBSD, you can't blow smoke up Theo's ___.
-If you aren't blowing smoke, Theo is generally "the voice of reason," but he's human, and can sometimes get the wrong idea like anyone else. (Who gave him the idea that Genesi was representing itself as a huge edifice, vs. a muddling startup possibly trying to do right?)
-If you don't have the courtesy to stand up and correct him before he enacts bad policy, he's probably not going to want to work with you anyway. (The McEwen 'people who piss me off' excuse -- But if you don't have Theo's best interest in mind, you don't have the project's best interest in mind, and it's time to find another project.)
-If it comes down to an unrecoverable disagreement, you can always fork. However, the 'value' of OpenBSD is in the auditing, so forks usually drop to the attractiveness of NetBSD_without_the_scalability.
If the Barbie were still going and had the same exact problems (including customer support, if applicable), I doubt relations there would've taken a nosedive so quickly, and as far as I know, Theo and friends don't have a problem with
expensive 486 boards. So what happened? ... (For those who can claim authority: Don't tell me, tell misc@, if there's a chance it's worth salvaging. But if you can't be 'Open' about it, they'll be happy to hand you plenty of rope.)
Third, OpenBSD's policy is always to support hardware makers that give full and free access to the documentation (Read: no NDA). Look backward in that mailing list for a thread about SPARC documentation for OpenBSD. :-D
Policy can/has been simplified to "Free as in build a suitcase nuke out of it."
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Being the first 'scene' platform into a major project's CVS
was a great bragging right and could remain so... I'd suggest not losing it, or at least, not going down in memory as
only wasting the project's time. :-)