It's interesting... The main problem that comes to mind is that, for example, if I integrate junit into Drupal, commit the code, and I've just put the entire development effort of junit's worth of rank into the system. Not accurate. What's more that site (ohloh.net) has some difficult licensing, and you shouldn't be using it. For example: - The site you are using doesn't allow anyone below the age of 18 years old to register with the site ("You must be 18 years of age or older to register as a member and use the Services.") so I'm not sure these results CAN be accurate. What's more, Open Source projects are not limited to 18+. I mean, 13 I can understand due to legal concerns in the US about COPPA, but 18? What the...? - Any use of the site forfeits every right you have - "When you post Content, you hereby grant us a royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, fully sublicensable, worldwide, non-exclusive right to use, reproduce, modify, translate, adapt, publish, create derivative works of, transmit, distribute, perform, display, delete (in whole or in part), and incorporate the Content for any purpose and without acknowledgement to you." So don't post anything interesting, anything you ever intend to publish, etc, because these guys can use it without ever giving source credit (that's unconscionable in my opinion - essentially it's a license for plagiarism for anything anyone posts). All-in-all, this site about Open Source doesn't seem to very "Open" itself - in fact it seems like they spent more time and money on the legal contract than the site contents. I'm sure the inaccuracies that can be shaken out (I'm not convinced they all technically can - crawling project is VERY complicated) will be in time, but the "corporate" license is a little tough pill to swallow. I'm sure Scott and everyone are good people and all, but be careful what you post up on the site - they've got a HUGE legal contract behind it with a couple big downers. Sorry, I know its off topic, but I was pretty shocked when I read the terms. Jonathan On Oct 22, 2006, at 11:10 AM, John VanDyk wrote:
Yes, that's quite a bit more than Plone, which is worth $257.
Hi,
This might worth a look. One interesting point is this stuff:
"This calculator estimates how much it would cost to hire a team to write this project from scratch."
Result? $5,364,474 with default values :)
http://ohloh.net/projects/3189
Programming language usage and codebase history are also interesting. And they have some (false?) findings about licences used. Maybe they care to explain what files they identified with these licenses in more detail.
Gabor
-- Jonathan Lambert Principal | FireBright, Inc. Email: j@firebright.com -------------------------------------------------- "Victory goes to the player who makes the next-to-last mistake." - Chessmaster Savielly Grigorievitch Tartakower (1887-1956)