intertwingly

It’s just data

Community over Code


Noah Slater: Joining the ASF was an interesting experience for me. I had come from a free software background, and proudly wielded my gnu.org email address around. At some point along this journey, I gave up on my publishing software. There was no other reason for my continued involvement with the project, beyond the fact that I loved being a part of the community. It was, and remains, so vibrant and positive. All of the aggression, and trolling, and arguments I had become used to on the free software lists just didn’t exist. It was comparatively idyllic! It slowly occurred to me that free software misses the point, and so does open source. It isn’t about enforcing freedoms and political agendas. It isn’t about more eyes for shallow bugs. It’s about community. Without a throng of decent, friendly people who are open to new ideas, discussion, and who enjoy collaborating and helping each other, a project like this is nothing. A good community can make up for poor documentation, and lack of features. A good community can make up for anything!

I love CouchDB, but I love the CouchDB community even more.