Andrew Dunstan writes: > Your suggestion elsewhere of "pick your second favourite app" is likely > to result in a more scattergun approach. Also, if it had the imprimatur > of the PostgreSQL community to some extent appraoches to projects might > be more welcome - "Dear open-source-project-manager, on behalf of the > PostgrSQL community we would like to offer you assistance in making sure > your application works with PostgrSQL, the world's most advanced > open-source database system...."
The only way someone is going to get work done on a sustained basis is if he's got a personal interest, the so-called "itch". You're not going to achieve anything, except possibly being ridiculed, if you start sending out form letters "on behalf of the PostgreSQL community". If people already support PostgreSQL to some extent, go there and test it and send in patches with improvements. If people don't support PostgreSQL yet, get a good sense for what the feeling of the project maintainers toward database abstraction layers is, then throw out a design plan. But the key is to show results, not intentions. That is how open-source development works. -- Peter Eisentraut [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])