On 5/18/05, Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > The Postgres project has been exceedingly successful while using email > lists as the primary means of communication/organization. I for one > am disinclined to tinker with such a fundamental aspect of the way that > the community operates. If we try to substitute a bug tracker for the > mailing lists, I think we'll be making a very basic change in the > community's communication structure, and not one for the better. >
I agree that it's a major change, and the significance of changing the communication structure should not be underestimated. But a) I believe it would be a change for the better, and b) BZ uses a very flexible and verbose email notification system, so the departure from the existing email list structure would not be so drastic. I read through the discussion link that Andrew provided (thanks Andrew), and during that discussion you appeared to be in favour of bugzilla, for the same sorts of reasons I am promoting it now. What changed? > >> Call me a normaliser, but even if the maintenance cost is higher, I > >> think it's worth it to have a centralised, authoratitive, organised > >> repository for dev task data. > > > I agree. > > Since the development community is neither centralised nor organized, > why would you expect such a repository to have anything to do with > what actually happens? > I think the decentralised nature of the community is one of the things that is responsible for this "steep learning curve", and could stand to be improved. And deploying a more centralised system for development management would be a crucial first step in said improvement. In the interests of putting my money where my mouth is, I would be willing to enlist in the housekeeping effort for this hypothetical new system. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match