On Sunday, 3 January 2021 at 02:10:10 UTC+2,
woodb...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Saturday, January 2, 2021 at 8:41:18 AM UTC-6, Öö Tiib wrote:
Read again:
> > You do not think what is the benefit of others from you.
> > You think about yourself, how you did things. Throw that
> > away, no one cares. That part only makes it hard for you
> > to make successful things. Care about convenience and
> > benefit of others.
> >
> > People think: That guy annoys with accounts. Do I want to test
> > his stuff so badly to make account? FlatBuffers do not require
> > me to make account. Probably it is some kind of scam to get
> > my e-mail or something and then spam me.
> I've been on this list for over 16 years and have been improving
> my software. We could, for example, go back to the first commits
> of my repo and compare how long it takes to build then and now,
> the sizes of the executables then and now, the additional
> functionality, etc.
>
> I believe having some closed-source software (private property)
> is the way to go.
We are not talking about you, we are talking about your potential
customers who do not know you nor care about you.
> > Should I
> > manufacture some false, throw-away identity to try his
> > garbage? Yuck.
> Feel free to point out some weaknesses. My FixedVector
> class is new and it needs some help.
I haven't even tried to use it. Only looked into code. Code
like all the other millions of lines of code I've seen. Problem
of none of programmers is that they lack code for something.
There is usually annoyingly long list of choices instead.
So what matters are benefits, downsides and effort needed
to use one or other in that long list. You have made the item
that you name "middleware writer" tiresome to even evaluate
if it has any benefits whatsoever in that pile of inconveniences
so it never enters that list of choices of smart and
hard-working people.
Yes, people do not care about you or your code. I said
"Throw that away, no one cares. That part only makes it hard for
you to make successful things. Care about convenience and
benefit of others." Only if you ever cared about others for just
a bit there is chance that they start to care about whatever
you have made.
> > See, you have already lost by asking for account.
> Providing a SaaS was a great idea when I started and still is.
> Building a (walled) garden is a privilege and adventure. I hope
> to continue to grow into these areas: cross-platform,
> middleware, network-programming, serialization,
> messaging, managed-services.
Yes, and people do not care about you, your code or your
"walled garden". Think why you fought edit war of Wikipedia
with Leigh? You wanted to advertise your "walled garden" so
people would come to see it. Why? Why you spam about thing
no one wants to see? May be few wanted to see it ever. No
one of these few has said that they did like what they saw.
It is because you did not care about them but about yourself.