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The material will form the basis for a proposed open-source project, called Project Beacon, which will be voted on within coming months, according to IBM. About 15 organizations, including commercial software companies and consulting firms, said they intend to use the software.
By giving some of its intellectual property in software development to Eclipse, IBM hopes to encourage the use of structured software development processes, or methodologies. It also stands to benefit from the work of Eclipse participants, said Roger Oberg, vice president of marketing at IBM's Rational division.
"When we'd have arguments over who has the best basic process for development, nobody wins," Oberg said. "Rather than controlling the basic process framework, we (at IBM) can leverage what the open-source community does. And other software vendors can do the same around our processes."
The donation consists of code comprising about 15 percent of the Rational Unified Process--a long-standing development methodology for setting up projects and assigning roles such as testers, programmers and project managers. IBM is also providing documentation that recommends a common set of terms, roles and tools to customize the basic process.
Developers could, for example, modify the basic Rational Unified Process to support different methodologies, such as Agile development, Oberg said.
The code donation is one of many IBM has made to Eclipse, a foundation it established as a consortium of vendors that later became an open-source establishment.
Eclipse members are, by and large, software vendors that have adopted the Eclipse software as the basis for their development tools. The Eclipse software, which has become popular among Java programmers, provides a basic framework to which other tools can be added.
For example, in the case of Project Beacon, the software would act as a plug-in for the Eclipse front-end software and could be combined with other Eclipse-based tools.
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Right. Maybe some niche open-source efforts will adopt proper processes and methodologies, but the most dedicated and religious of O.S. programmers are probably worshiping Linus Torvalds' method of software development...
"A 'spec' is close to useless. I have _never_ seen a spec that was both big enough to be useful _and_ accurate. And I have seen _lots_ of total crap work that was based on specs. It's _the_ single worst way to write software, because it by definition means that the software was written to match theory, not reality."
-Linus Torvalds
Here's hoping IBM can make a dent.
Right. Maybe some niche open-source efforts will adopt proper processes and methodologies, but the most dedicated and religious of O.S. programmers are probably worshiping Linus Torvalds' method of software development...
"A 'spec' is close to useless. I have _never_ seen a spec that was both big enough to be useful _and_ accurate. And I have seen _lots_ of total crap work that was based on specs. It's _the_ single worst way to write software, because it by definition means that the software was written to match theory, not reality."
-Linus Torvalds
Here's hoping IBM can make a dent.