*finalized* analytical memos
This commit is contained in:
parent
a4d65134cf
commit
60d4d113f7
@ -1,21 +1,32 @@
|
||||
background:
|
||||
how has FLOSS engineering traditionally been looked at?
|
||||
- evolution / sustainability
|
||||
- extending the metaphor while trying to recenter the agency of FOSS developers
|
||||
- Sarta "much lke a living organism, when an organization changes sometime and survives, it looks "as if" it has adapted to its environment" (p44)
|
||||
|
||||
why include forking (definition of new project in relation to the environment) rather than established project
|
||||
- as studies included show, the legacy resource base of the upstream project can be conveyed to the downstream project with little friction
|
||||
- the porousness of FLOSS projects is a critical departure from the formal organizations that have been canonically studied in organizational adaptation research
|
||||
- to frame the hard fork as `new' does not account for its relational construction with established contributors, communities, and resources
|
||||
|
||||
formal organizations -> open source software projects:
|
||||
economic competition doesn't quite fit but noneconomic competition does
|
||||
- adaptation may fit open source better than framing of strategic change given the heterogenous desires of different OSS developers, not everyone wants a large project
|
||||
- economic competition doesn't quite fit but noneconomic competition does
|
||||
- looking at the ill-defined attention and user markets that surround each project
|
||||
- the attention markets create competition (esp. WRT hard forks)
|
||||
|
||||
notes:
|
||||
- code reuse by definition is an intentional act with observable outcomes that moves the project towards convergence
|
||||
- convergence is operationalized in different ways
|
||||
|
||||
analysis:
|
||||
|
||||
GENERAL PAPER CHARACTERISTICS
|
||||
What do most studies focus on?
|
||||
- 14 papers focused on procedural change; 3 papers with both; 17 papers focused on technical change
|
||||
- 12 papers focus on some sort of code reuse; this can be either dependency management or copy-based reuse
|
||||
- 7 papers focus on license changes
|
||||
- 7 papers focus on license changes (fit, not necessarily performance driven)
|
||||
- how many papers focus on boundary management? 5(He, Geiger, Wessel, Barcomb, Hsieh) ; how many papers focus on act of forking? (Businge, Zhou, Gamalielsson) more focuse on the vnrionemnt of forking
|
||||
- outliers include focus on things like adaptation to covid-19 lockdowns, use of GitHub sponsors, compliance with GDPR.
|
||||
|
||||
What methods do they use?
|
||||
@ -25,6 +36,8 @@ What methods do they use?
|
||||
- 15 looked at small, nonrepresentative samples
|
||||
- the rest tried to use representative samples, and some tried to even use comprehensive samples (Jahansashi)
|
||||
- the methods section should be a table in the paper e.g. Floor's literature review
|
||||
- the specificity of a case study is well-suited to this type of research, where intention is critical; but it leaves the papers with replicability limitations and meta-analyses with generalizeability issues.
|
||||
-
|
||||
|
||||
INTERNAL DYNAMICS
|
||||
Who are doing the changes?
|
||||
@ -35,8 +48,11 @@ Who are doing the changes?
|
||||
|
||||
What do they find?
|
||||
- internal downsides to adaptive change (often, makes project less rational and less productive)
|
||||
- affective dislike to things that change the status quo
|
||||
- affective dislike to things that change the status quo (GDPR, scaling) though some recognition of adaptation importance (Sojer) and some even disavowall (Jahanshahi)
|
||||
- often do not evaluate whether the changes "work" so to speak; many of the changes "work" as an inclusion criteria for their study
|
||||
- many of the changes imply benefits to standardization, centralization, and transparency for projects
|
||||
- not always; the fit isn't necessarily performance-based
|
||||
- productivity and labor-saving are a main motivation of these different actions; event when convergence is intentional, labor displacement is similarly important
|
||||
|
||||
typology of adaptation:
|
||||
- internal 18
|
||||
@ -57,11 +73,13 @@ What are the motivations for adaptive changes/ what are the environmental pressu
|
||||
Are there any relational components in which the environment and the project are reflexing off of each other?
|
||||
- many recommendations and suggestions from the research center on moving the environment closer to the organization
|
||||
- some of the management of breaking changes in dependency networks look at the strategic nonadaption or ways of flagging internal change to the external envrionment
|
||||
- TODO: where does tool development sit within this?
|
||||
- where does tool development sit within this?
|
||||
- recommendations for configurable and contextualized tool development are not environment-side, though do preserve project activity in a way that is interesting
|
||||
- technosolutionism in HCI; why must we always build an automated tool to fix the human problem of work? (social trust issue re: dependabot and moderating bots)
|
||||
|
||||
Environmental multiplicity
|
||||
- the social coding platforms (some proprietary) are often intractable from different environments that surround and impact projects
|
||||
- environmental multiplicity muddies the adaptive analysis; are the influx of prospective contributors that need to be moderated idiosyncratic to a project? a product of GitHub's social network
|
||||
- environmental multiplicity muddies the adaptive analysis; are the influx of prospective contributors that need to be moderated idiosyncratic to a project? a product of GitHub's social network; does GitHub's permutation of what it means to participate in OSS (see Dabbish on social coding) exist as a relevant environment outside of a project's idiosyncratic 'market'? to what extent are any of these social coding platforms just conduits for existing developer motivations and activity?
|
||||
|
||||
WHATS NEXT:
|
||||
What are the impacts on developers and implications for future research?
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user