On Tue, Jul 12, 2011 at 7:00 AM, Bruno Renié <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi fellow Django devs, > > I'd like to talk about a site that all of you probably know: djangopeople.net. > > The site has originally been developed by Simon Willison and Natalie > Downe and is a very useful part of the different sites connecting the > Django community. Recently, however, Simon and Natalie became too busy > to handle the maintenance work and, with the site going down every now > and then, people started to worry about its future. I read at some > point that Simon had more or less agreed to let other people run the > site, but there wasn't any volunteer I was aware of. > > Given that the source code is on github, we started with Dan Fairs and > Filip Jukić to work on the codebase: updating to Django 1.3 and the > practices and conventions that have emerged since 2009. This is still > a work in progress but the result can be seen on the github repo: > https://github.com/brutasse/djangopeople.net. > > At this year's EuroPython, we talked about this with Jannis, Andrew > and Simon. The result of the chat was that Simon is willing to let the > DSF run djangopeople.net as part of its infrastructure and the DSF now > has a database dump of djangopeople.net. The idea is now to make this > a more open project: with Dan and Filip, we haven't very much > advertised our work since we were not sure where we were going. Now > we'd like to help the DSF run the site and make it evolve with a very > high bus factor. > > To that end, we'd love to hear from anyone willing to help us with the > site, from writing code to suggesting new features and improvements. > Maybe it could be interesting to team with the djangopeople.me crew as > well :) > > Assuming the DSF lets us handle djangopeople.net, the next steps would > be to get the data and load it on a django-frienly host (I have an > ep.io app running the updated codebase). The purpose of this email is > to make more official the fact that there's a group of people working > on it, and that more group members are welcome :).
For the record -- if *anyone* has an idea for how to make the Django community a better place, and is willing to put the time and effort into making those ideas happen, the DSF will do anything it can to help support them. I'm really excited that Bruno, Dan and Filip et al have stepped up to look after and improve Django People. I can't wait to see what nifty new features you can come up with. Best of luck, and if you (or anyone else) need anything that the DSF can help provide, don't hesitate to ask. Yours, Russ Magee %-) -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Django developers" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers?hl=en.
