• Moonrise2473@feddit.it
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    10
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    8 months ago

    Doesn’t help that every nextcloud official announcement promises the moon while delivering not even stardust.

    Example: this blog post from two years ago: https://nextcloud.com/blog/plan-your-next-trip-with-nextcloud-maps-new-features/

    None of the features written in that post are available, even today

    It’s something that it might be coming in a decade if someone is inspired by the mockups and codes it. When you install the maps plugin it shows a map of the world, and that’s it.

    If they need to announce a concept that only exists as a mockup, either publish the news on April 1st or write “concept of how maps might integrate with nextcloud 50”

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      3
      ·
      8 months ago

      Well, every project ends up finding things that aren’t as easy as they may have thought, or chooses after the fact to devote the time to other things. I could cherry pick decade old features from every long-lived project, like KDE or Gnome and say that makes them worthless. They patently aren’t worthless, and anyone that wants to criticize is welcome to file a bug and follow through on the fix. Most bugs don’t get fixed because people won’t follow up.

      I’m happy with where they’ve gone overall, it fits a lot of my needs that I’d have to use something like Google or Microsoft instead, so it’s annoying as shit to see every person that can’t be arsed to put in the time to get it working properly for the things it does well to shit on it every. goddamn. time. it’s. name. shows. up gets on my last nerve.

      • Moonrise2473@feddit.it
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        5
        ·
        8 months ago

        I’m using nextcloud and I like it (also I don’t see all this slowness even if I run it on a core i3 8100) but it’s the general stance from the devs

        Everything it’s announced like it’s ready to the public when it’s just a proof of concept (not even alpha)

        Another example is the mail plugin. It’s an unusable early alpha yet on the blog there are three posts starting from four years ago talking about inexistent features https://nextcloud.com/?s=Mail&wpessid=1612

        Same for the forms plugin. Early alpha that doesn’t have an essential feature like emailing responses to specific addresses (it sends notifications via nextcloud). Again the blog talks 4 years ago like it’s ready for everyone.

        Or the Trello clone. Many problems like it “ruins” the tasks sync by creating read-only tasks that get synced via caldav.

        Or nextcloud photos, big post in 2022 but it’s very barebone

        Or docs, so many posts yet it has so many problems.

        Or the desktop client, where builds are pushed to regular users without testing the installer script (forced reboots without confirmation, crashing explorer.exe instead of asking a graceful restart)

        The only NC plugin that I’m using without problems and that I feel it passed the beta stage is Music and its subsonic compatible server. No blog posts about it. Maybe because it’s hosted on owncloud GitHub repository

        • ikidd@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          2
          ·
          8 months ago

          On the plugins, I couldn’t say, I’ve not used those plugins. I do use ones like Gpoddersync, Recipes and Snappymail with no issues. I did try that Forms plugin and it was a bag of shit. Never had issues with the client, but I’ve only used it on Windows once, every other system its on is Linux, but it’s been solid.

          In the Docker All-in-One, the Collabra Suite integration is flawless and I have several people using it on my server. Performance is snappy, especially with a few recent updates. I highly recommend the AIO, after having used NC in baremetal, NextcloudPi, Docker, it’s the least maintenance and best update experience by far.