> From: Nicola Ken Barozzi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > I don't understand: what is this incubator doing anyway if all the > > projects are incubated somewhere else? > > 1 - votes the projects into Apache after check that all the nitty-gritty > stuff has been taken care of
Or does it recommend to another body that incubation processes have completed sucessfully and that that body can take on subject to their own vote. For example, I don't think the Incubator can approve a new TLP without the board voting, but it might recommend to the board that all necessary activities have been comleted. Again - I am not convinced that the Incubator should be the arbiter of what is accepted, but it definitely should be the guardian of correct process. > 2 - serves as a central place to store incubation history and > information +1. Would be good to formalise. > 3 - serves as a place where to discuss incubation per se, where > shepherds, sponsors and project members can confront +1. > 4 - serves as a place where to incubate TLP > Serves as a place to incubate anything surely? > >> People complain about lack of rules, not because there are too many. > > > > Really? who did? > > Everyone. For example Berin Lautenbach and Ted Leung, but you can put > basically anyone that asked us for something. > Just to clarify - my issue is not too many or to few rules, but that I'd like to see the rules clearly documented so that I can ensure that anything I am involved in incubating is doing what it needs to do. I've also worked a long time in large organisations, so I have a paranoia around being blind-sided by requirements I didn't know existed because they weren't documented. That might be playing in a little here :>. Cheers, Berin This message was sent through MyMail http://www.mymail.com.au --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]