From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: Lisp is alive Date: 1996/09/29 Message-ID: <3052948066312880@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 185926566 sender: erik@arcana.naggum.no references: <3052746344930826@naggum.no> <843831257snz@wildcard.demon.co.uk> <3052849568663014@naggum.no> <4nzq2a9zzp.fsf@rtp.ericsson.se> organization: Naggum Software; +47 2295 0313; http://www.naggum.no newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp [Raymond Toy] | Having things change on the archive would make Lisp appear alive and | well. As it is, it looks rather dead. I'm sympathetic to your arguments, but I ran the SGML Repository at the University of Oslo for nearly six years, five of which with a significant impact in my own wallet, and I have another take on repositories going stale, and I can sum it up in one word: abuse. Provide something for free, and certain classes of users (let's call them "freshmen at life in general" and "recently graduated MBAs") will utterly fail to appreciate the nature and needs of a free resource. Both will "require" some level of service, and both will feel free to steal whatever is there and re-market it. I have come to believe that free net resources exist as long as there is academic interest in a subject. When the interest reaches commercially viable levels, (1) people won't put commercially viable things there when they could have sold it, and (2) those who run them aren't likely to provide commercial enterprises with free marketing, anyway. In any case, if the maintenance of a respository of any useful size is not well-funded, it requires _very_ dedicated people. Very dedicated people who create something that is recognized to be universally useful will get significantly de-motivated when they seek funding from the user community and they get turned down. This may not reflect the fate of the CMU Lisp Repository, but the reason a repository goes stale may in fact be _increased_ interest, not reduced. #\Erik -- Those who do not know Lisp are doomed to reimplement it.