On Nov 13, 2013, at 1:14 PM, Marvin Humphrey <mar...@rectangular.com> wrote:

> On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 11:58 PM, ant elder <ant.el...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> So, we _can_ let podlings have their own binding release votes and we
>> could do our own "pTLP" type experiments without even needing to go to
>> the board. We should try that. Not for every podling but just for
>> select ones where the circumstances mean it will work better than the
>> current approach. If there are no major objections to some experiments
>> with this approach then i'd like to start trying one.
> 
> +1 to run an experiment.  The position that Roy has taken changes the
> equation.
> 
> While a number of people have expressed a preference for the approach of
> electing more podling contributors directly onto the IPMC, in practice it
> remains uncertain whether the IPMC is capable of identifying, nominating and
> voting in enough candidates -- as evidenced by some threads currently in
> progress on private@incubator.
> 
> I propose that the experiment take the following form:
> 
> 1.  The initial PPMC shall be composed exclusively of IPMC members.
> 2.  PPMC votes are binding for every release except the first.
> 3.  One IPMC vote is required for each release after the first.
> 
> I believe that this model provides sufficient oversight because the first
> release must cross a high bar, and because it changes the dynamics of
> electing PPMC members: even core contributors will now have to earn PPMC
> membership, demonstrating to an initial PPMC composed of IPMC members that
> they understand the Apache Way well enough to steward their project.

+ 1, I like this balance and caveats. 

In my personal view (which I am not generalizing), getting the first release is 
very time consuming but educational and very much worth it. I do not look at it 
as one month or so for a release is unreasonable, but rather think it as, one 
month amortized over quality subsequent releases. Which ever approach or policy 
changes we take, we still need patient incumbents and overly patient mentors. 
The only way mentors scale is to teach the process and groom new teachers. 
Ofcourse not many students will like the teachers until they also become 
teachers. Atleast this happened to me, I appreciate my mentors more now then 
when I was a student :) 

Suresh

> 
> Marvin Humphrey
> 
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