Bug shallowness in open-source, Macintosh software
Central to the power of open-source software is
bug shallowness, the relative ease of finding and fixing bugs. The open-source
movement began with Unix software, so many users were also programmers capable
of finding and fixing bugs given the source code. But as the open-source
movement reaches the Macintosh platform, bugs may not be shallow because few
Macintosh users are programmers. Based on reports from open-source developers,
I, however, conclude that that bugs are as shallow in open-source, Macintosh
software as in any other open-source software.
Posted: Tue - May 18, 2004 at 09:59 PM