On 4/1/21 12:40 AM, Thiago Macieira wrote:
I'm painting a scenario to understand how you'd have to handle such a
situation, when there isn't a company you can call upon to fix the problem for
you.

We keep discussing the ability to upgrade Qt but not upgrade the rest of the
OS. I understand that Qt is a central component of the UI, but it's no less
critical than a lot of other components that you may need to upgrade in order
to deal with circumstances changing.

What you are describing is __exactly__ why companies buy commercial licenses and pay for support contracts. They pay to have their environment supported and not be told that they have to replace their environment.

At the crux of the issue is the extremely narrow project life cycle. You and others consider 7 years a long time. It's not. It's less than half of adequate. Companies that need adequate pay for a commercial license and support to get adequate, that's why they fork over the money. QtC (or whoever) even came out with Boot2Qt to encourage these markets into the Qt space.

Honestly, at this point, if Qt project/QtC wants to continue with its 7-year-or-less window, it needs to put an official disclaimer on the project like Microsoft had to in some of their products.

"Not for use in medical devices or devices where SAFETY is a requirement/concern."

Not squirreled away in a doc file nobody looks at, but very publicly and everywhere.

That will solve the problem for the future because nobody will ever be able to get a product using Qt through regulatory approval from that point forward.Well, they might, but it will be __really__ expensive because the SOUP (Software Of Unknown Providence) research will turn up the "not for use" clause which will add a whole bunch of paperwork and testing requirements.

Scott will still be screwed. Sorry Scott. On the bright side you won't be screwed in the future because your company will have had to move to something else.

Existing medical device companies with licenses and contracts will have to abandon them then hold their breath some new HIPA/FDA tweak doesn't come down the pipe forcing them to bite a very bitter bullet.

The medical device companies using 4.x and earlier have already bitten that bullet.

As a project Qt cannot serve both the bleeding edge and the deep pocket medical device world that needs decades (plural) long support for an existing device. It needs to make a choice and officially rip the bandage off.

--
Roland Hughes, President
Logikal Solutions
(630)-205-1593

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