But many players are able to do it for years.
with:
If it's so easy, why are you not doing it?
He's not just a butthole, he's a stereotypical open source developer butthole. On the other hand, if he worked for Microsoft, he'd be claiming that it takes a PhD to do it...
Yes, you realistically cannot implement everything every user wants, but at the same time your software is meant to solve problems. Keeping direct communication with your users, and understanding what they find useful or not, should be the driving force of the design and features of your app.
FWIW, I've been on both sides of this discussion, as an OSS maintainer and user, and have experience with demanding users and arrogant and, yes, _lazy_ developers alike. Let's stop the narrative that users don't have the right to request features because they're not paying customers, and that this is driving developers to burn out. Communication is key to producing useful software regardless of its license. OSS development in particular is not just about throwing some code online and forgetting about it.
I agree that taking that kind of "closed" approach is not helpful.
you say that like it's a bad or even a surprising thing. for a lot of people that's the entire point of open source development - in their day jobs they do what they are required to do for the company that pays them, and then in their own open source projects they can do what genuinely interests them.
It's a question of whose problems. It's highly unlikely that we perceive the same problems in the same order of priority, so why should I donate my time to your problems when I am already wishing for more time to implement the solutions to my own? In commercial software there's an obvious incentive to work on features that are in demand by people who will pay for them. Expecting people to act like that incentive still exists even when it doesn't is insane.
> I've been on both sides of this discussion, as an OSS maintainer and user, and have experience with demanding users and arrogant and, yes, _lazy_ developers alike.
The gall to call someone who doesn't want to work on your problems for free "lazy"... Now imagine that you voluntarily participate in a very active OSS project and there are tens of people like you who extend that massive middle finger over and over whenever they can't convince you to donate a work week to their esoteric dream feature.
> Let's stop the narrative that users don't have the right to request features because they're not paying customers, and that this is driving developers to burn out.
The "narrative", again, is "that you're not entitled to demand new features, as a (non-paying) user, you can't allocate dev's time to work on what you want." This is the card you insist is played too often, not that "users don't have the right to request features". I don't see how you could honestly get these two things mixed up.
> Keeping direct communication with your users, and understanding what they find useful or not, should be the driving force of the design and features of your app.
Who are you to decide what should motivate me?
If you just wish to solve your own problems, build things for yourself and keep it private. If, on the other hand, you want to help others and make your software public, then do right by the people who decided to try your software and listen to what they have to say.
How anyone can defend the attitude of the VLC developer in the thread linked above is beyond me.
It can, yes. There's nothing preventing it, except that it's a shitty way to work in the open, and you may as well make the project proprietary or source available. The maintainers might have their own vision of the project direction, and they may reject contributions, but refusing contributions outright is how forks are made. Nothing wrong with that either, but usually the projects that are more receptive and responsive to user feedback are the ones that users and developers gravitate towards.
Why is the artist obligated to do the work you think they should do? Why, if they don't do this work, should they be obligated to not release their work publicly?
FOSS is not an obligation to do everything that every user wants you to do. It's not an obligation to even communicate with those users. In fact, it comes explicitly with no warranty, even for fitness for any purpose.
The developer is a poor communicator, but how anybody can be defending those annoying, entitled, lazy users is beyond me.