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Comodo
Comodo Internet Security 2025 was obliterated by an exploit!
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<blockquote data-quote="bazang" data-source="post: 1106893" data-attributes="member: 114717"><p>Melih will never fix it. There is no dedicated development staff for the Comodo code base. The developers at Comodo are shuffled around from project to project. That is how it has always been. For CIS\CFW a few developers are given a window of a few months to work on it. Because they are needed elsewhere - on projects that bring in revenue dollars. This makes perfect economic sense.</p><p></p><p>There for a while Melih hired China-based Haibo Zhang to be the Comodo Product\Project Manager, but he left years back and has never been replaced. Right about the time that CIS\CFW developed stopped 3 or 4 years ago.</p><p></p><p>For the price that Melih is charging for Xcitium, he will never have enough revenue to make the Comodo code-base any better than it is right now. A software product has to generate at least $1 MM USD for every 3 to 4 full-time personnel that support it (only 1 of those 3 or 4 people are software engineers). Comodo earns $0 and Xcitium might generate $500,000 per year. So you get 1.5 or 2 full-time people to support the product. Of those 1.5 or 2 people, you get 3/8ths to 1/2 of a developer. That translates to 1 developer working 780 to 1020 hours per year on a software code base. At Comodo companies, that developer has to do everything. Fix bugs. Develop new features. Unit test. Fix driver issues. Configure and maintain all of the supporting infrastructure. Create install packages. Perform all QA\QC. They have to do the entire supporting sysadmin of the infrastructure, software engineering, and the entire DevOps. Maybe in 10 years that developer can get around to fixing all the bugs and other problems, assuming that the underlying operating system remains essentially static over that same time period.</p><p></p><p>¯\_(ツ)_/¯</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bazang, post: 1106893, member: 114717"] Melih will never fix it. There is no dedicated development staff for the Comodo code base. The developers at Comodo are shuffled around from project to project. That is how it has always been. For CIS\CFW a few developers are given a window of a few months to work on it. Because they are needed elsewhere - on projects that bring in revenue dollars. This makes perfect economic sense. There for a while Melih hired China-based Haibo Zhang to be the Comodo Product\Project Manager, but he left years back and has never been replaced. Right about the time that CIS\CFW developed stopped 3 or 4 years ago. For the price that Melih is charging for Xcitium, he will never have enough revenue to make the Comodo code-base any better than it is right now. A software product has to generate at least $1 MM USD for every 3 to 4 full-time personnel that support it (only 1 of those 3 or 4 people are software engineers). Comodo earns $0 and Xcitium might generate $500,000 per year. So you get 1.5 or 2 full-time people to support the product. Of those 1.5 or 2 people, you get 3/8ths to 1/2 of a developer. That translates to 1 developer working 780 to 1020 hours per year on a software code base. At Comodo companies, that developer has to do everything. Fix bugs. Develop new features. Unit test. Fix driver issues. Configure and maintain all of the supporting infrastructure. Create install packages. Perform all QA\QC. They have to do the entire supporting sysadmin of the infrastructure, software engineering, and the entire DevOps. Maybe in 10 years that developer can get around to fixing all the bugs and other problems, assuming that the underlying operating system remains essentially static over that same time period. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ [/QUOTE]
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