| By Duncan Mills | Article Rating: |
|
| July 8, 2005 06:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
49,034 |
Community was a recurring theme at JavaOne, this year, and indeed at many of the Java User Groups that I've participated in recently. The Java Community (with a big C): a global tribe converging on programming nirvana where all is open, free and yet somehow affords us all a decent living. The community vision itself is not something I have a beef with, indeed I like to belong, I like to contribute, and importantly I can afford to - so I do. The community raised me, so to speak, nurturing me through technology transitions, and delivering timely advice through the "Village Voice" of the search engines and forums. I feel obliged and happy to give a little back. But something is rotten in the state of Denmark. We are gnawed by the cancer of bigotry and opinion - by a simple lack of respect.
Don't get me wrong, discussion, debate, opinion are all essential to a society. Likewise we must preserve the personal freedom to express a viewpoint, but it comes down to the old adage that with rights come responsibility. Is it reasonable to insult and mock those with differing viewpoints? To publicly denigrate a fellow community member or group because they use the wrong IDE, Framework or design pattern (in your opinion) shows ignorance and lack of respect.
If you think I'm doing something wrong then explain why, provide proof that an alternate way is better. For instance, I've been seeing blog postings recently saying how evil and retarded certain frameworks are, with absolutely no proof, metrics or reasoned arguments to back up the position. The authors having exercised the right to express an opinion but have not accepted responsibility for what they are pontificating on. To those that say I don't have to justify my opinion - wrong, you absolutely do have to justify it, that is the responsible and respectful thing to do. I might feel that an author may have a point, but how can I judge? Yes I can come to an informed decision by look at source or by running metrics, but why should I? If a flamer has not done that and has not provided reasoned proof then any opinion they express is essentially worthless.
We also need to work on language and attitude. Take for example that most impassioned of debates My IDE vs Your IDE. I for instance don't particularly like to use Ecipse, but please note that I don't hate it, I don't think its rubbish (or worse). It just so happens that I'm just not comfortable with it. JDeveloper suits the way I work so I use that. I still respect Eclipse as a tool; I'm in awe of the community effort that nurtures it and the ecosystem that surrounds it. I respect your preference for Ecipse, so just return the favor right?
What can the community do with those that do not offer respect and considered opinion? There has been a case of this recently on one of the open source frameworks user lists the proposal was made to ban an individual who was rude, insulting and generally spamming the list with nonsense. I found many of the reactions to this disappointing, - Just ignore it or set up a mail filter was a common solution. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Individuals have responsibility but so does society. To ignore this behavior shirks the responsibility we all have to develop and nurture the community as a whole lest it simply dissolve into anarchy. Any parent will tell you that a naughty child must be confronted and have the consequences of their actions made plain. This is no different and we have to consider, as Java passes its tenth birthday, that our community's difficult teenage years are looming. We're storing up a whole heap of trouble if this issue is not confronted and addressed by every one of us.
Author´s Note: I wrote this piece on the plane a few days back, before the tragic events of the 7th July here in the UK. Perhaps now it seems petty to be griping about this issue, but at the same time, the importance of the basic message is reinforced. Tolerance and respect are the highest of virtues and should extend to all aspects of our existence. Im deeply saddened by anyone whose adherence to dogma is more important than his or her respect for humanity.
Published July 8, 2005 Reads 49,034
Copyright © 2005 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Duncan Mills
Duncan Mills is senior director of product management for Oracle's Application Development Tools - including the JDeveloper IDE, and the Oracle Application Development Framework. He has been in the IT industry for the past 19 years working with Oracle, Java, and a variety of more obscure programming languages and frameworks along the way. Duncan is the co-author of the Oracle Press book: Oracle JDeveloper 10g for Forms and PL/SQL Developers - a Guide to Web Development with Oracle ADF.
![]() |
.NET From India 07/22/05 10:53:47 PM EDT | |||
Trackback Added: Every Community needs it rules; A recent JDJ article highlights the need of rules and some kind of regulation mechanism to be sucessful. Though the article talks about the Java community, I am sure that this is true for all communities. If you disagree with |
||||
![]() |
digereedoo 07/22/05 03:03:44 AM EDT | |||
I think the respect thing has nothing to do with java or programming or IDEs its a human thing. I would love to see a comparison of 20 developers with eclipse coding the same project against 3 developers with a typewriter + an assistant to type it in and compile it. That would be something to see and talk about! |
||||
- 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo Starts Today
- Cloud Computing Journal Continues To Publish World's Best Cloud Analysts
- SOA World Magazine "Readers' Choice Awards" Voting Is Now Open
- Amazon Web Services Database in the Cloud
- CIA's Jill Tummler Singer Newest Ulitzer Author
- CSC's VP of Cloud Computing to Discuss Orchestration in the Cloud
- Cisco, EMC, VMware & Intel Form Acadia JV
- Plone and Drupal: Different Approaches, Different Results
- Virtualization Expo Call for Papers Deadline December 15
- Sun To Cut 3,000 Jobs, Blames EC
- Move Over BI, Here Comes PI - Performance Intelligence
- Qt DevDays 2009 - Munich
- 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo Starts Today
- 1st Annual GovIT Expo: Letter from the Technical Chair
- SAP CTO to Speak at 4th International Cloud Computing Expo
- Cloud Computing Journal Continues To Publish World's Best Cloud Analysts
- Current Trends in the Data Management Market
- SOA World Magazine "Readers' Choice Awards" Voting Is Now Open
- Apps.gov Will Help Federal Agencies Embrace the Cloud: Vivek Kundra
- Is AT&T Apple's Achilles Heel?
- Oracle-Sun: Gartner Suspects EC of Ulterior Motives
- Amazon Web Services Database in the Cloud
- CIA's Jill Tummler Singer Newest Ulitzer Author
- CSC's VP of Cloud Computing to Discuss Orchestration in the Cloud
- Web Services Using ColdFusion and Apache CXF
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Eclipse "Pollinate" Project to Integrate with Apache Beehive
- Red Hat Named "Platinum Sponsor" of Virtualization Conference & Expo
- Apache's Tomcat 5.5 is First Release Ever to Use Eclipse JDT Java Compiler
- Beehive Code Now Available in Apache
- An Introduction to Ant
- "Beehive" Now Officially an Open Source Project: Apache Beehive
- SourceLabs Completes Open Source Java Middleware Platform With Apache Tomcat
- Apache Announces Jetspeed 2.0 Open Source Enterprise Portal
- How to Build RIAs with Apache Derby and Grizzly Comet
- Apache Geronimo To Miss August 6 Launch Date Target







































