All this wibbling about GNOME 3 and so on -- it's just not relevant to the data in the original article. The same thing happened to KDE at the time.
The reason is simple: Nokia. Nokia (and to a much lesser extent, Intel) built up a lot for Maemo and Meego. Just for KOffice/Calligra, at least twenty people were paid to work on the documents application. For all of Maemo/Meego, the total number of people Nokia funded was enormous.
And then Elop, and the burning platform, and Windows, and well, that was 2012.
By 2014, my company was dead, amongst others, and, yeah, the peak had peaked, and the big chance for free software had gone.
Yes, it does, because Nokia had its fingers in both bowls of porridge, to the extent where people like Michael Meeks were fighting really hard to keep a small library like kcalendar out of Maemo.
Nokia started with GTK and when they went to Qt, they never stopped their involvement with GTK/GNOME -- they seemed to have expected the idiots in both camps to just work together for the good of free software, and like the idiots we were, we didn't.
Good grief, the painful conversations we had after the Dublin MeeGo conf ended, between people from both camps...
I was there; I wrote code; I had employees, I went to the various conferences and trade shows. My company provided one of the default apps on the N9...
Did they ever actually get to this point? I understand it was the long term plan but the only MeeGo phones actually released by nokia were still GTK based.
It's not going to replace the enormous investment Nokia made into the free software/linux community... So it won't help the graphs the original article showed. But by another measure, it's already a success since it exists.
How do you explain the relative neglect happening at Microsoft and Apple, then? Or Mono -> Xamarin?
The market just shifted. If you remember, there were also efforts by Mozilla with Mozilla OS, Ubuntu with Unity, everyone and their cat was focusing on mobile.
The reason is simple: Nokia. Nokia (and to a much lesser extent, Intel) built up a lot for Maemo and Meego. Just for KOffice/Calligra, at least twenty people were paid to work on the documents application. For all of Maemo/Meego, the total number of people Nokia funded was enormous.
And then Elop, and the burning platform, and Windows, and well, that was 2012.
By 2014, my company was dead, amongst others, and, yeah, the peak had peaked, and the big chance for free software had gone.