Alan's Summary on the devel List about the latest Official FG world
Posted: Tue Dec 15, 2015 6:06 am
Alan Teeder on the Devel List wrote:On the Forum there is yet another acrimonious discussion. This time
(https://forum.flightgear.org/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=28265 ) which has three
threads.
The first is about an particular author wanting to retain some copyright
control over his work.
The second is about the ethics of simulating military aircraft
The third is about the role of core developers.
The first is a natural consequence of being GPL, and my opinion is that we
should find a way to support non GPL additions in some manner. By doing
this Flightgear will likely have some greatly improved external content.
The Flightgear engine is superb but, with a few noticeable exceptions, the
average quality of the aircraft in the official hangar is heavily biased
towards cosmetics and novice pilot use rather than realism and accuracy.
The second is that Thorsten, a core developer, made the statement on the
Forum "there's a consensus among the core contributors that FG is supposed
to be a civilian simulator, so weapons support by and large faces a hard
time being committed." I respect his pacifist views, but do not think that
they should be forced on the FG community as a whole. Flying high
performance military aircraft is an entirely different experience than that
found in a Cessna or an Airbus. In particular I question his statement that
"FG is supposed to be a civilian simulator".
This brings me to the third part , which is probably the most important.
My opinion is that is time that Flightgear is established as a normal club,
which has some kind of constitution, rules, committee, roles, officers, aims
etc. At the moment it has none of these (at least not published), and
muddling on without them is likely to produce repeat performances. We have
lost several key developers/contributors in recent years, leaving big holes
in their wake. Most of these have left suddenly and silently, which has
left me with quite a few worries.
I have kept this post deliberately brief.
Seasons greetings
Alan