| ▲ | jjav 13 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
> That means being honest about when a pet project is just a pet project rather than talking about every POC as if it’s production ready. And who isn't honest about it? Read the contract you have with the provider. There is a way to legitimately expect production-ready libraries: You sign a purchase order for the right to use that code for a year (typically, or multi-year) and pay a quite substantial amount of money for that. Then you have purchased the right to expect a certain level of quality (details can be in the contract and reflected in the price). If you're using something for free without having agreed to such a contract and paid the vendor accordingly, then you can expect exactly as much as you paid for it. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | hnlmorg 8 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
You’re twisting my argument. I’m not saying maintainers are obligated to make their code production ready. I said their READMEs should accurately represent the state of the project. If you, or anyone else, thinks that is an unfair assessment or that I should have to pay for a README not to claim to be production ready when it’s a POC, then you had a very weird view on how much effort it takes to write the line “this is an untested beta” | |||||||||||||||||
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