+1 github, it will be a better context for both the project and community.
Sent from my iPhone > On 28-11-2013, at 9:09, Evan Hughes <ehu...@gmail.com> wrote: > > As a student I first experienced Google wave back when I was in grade 8 and > at the time couldn't contribute or really take advantage of the system. I > followed it to 'wave in a box' and to the incubator but only just learning > the programming skills to contribute in development. I was looking forward > to seeing development into its original plans like the UI as depicted by > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfqThLudfEg. The current incubator's goals > and forward development is a bit vague and probably needs a redo since > situations changed. If you move Apache wave to GitHub the enthusiasts which > are pretty much who are left will follow, Wave will still survive. > > just a newbies opinion. > > Evan Hughes > > > On Thu, Nov 28, 2013 at 8:02 PM, Christian Grobmeier > <grobme...@gmail.com>wrote: > >> Hi folks, >> >> it seems as the first steam with the new people is gone. >> >> I believe it makes sense to discuss if the incubator is the right place. >> Incubation has a specific goal: forming a team which can do releases and >> is - in a way - active. >> >> I see there is little activity at all. The only person i have seen working >> on the codebase recently was Ali. >> He also was the release manager of package which had trouble to receive >> the necessary votes from its own team. >> >> My hope was this would change in the past months. But today I have only >> little hope. >> >> Playing the devils advocate I ask you (again): >> >> Do you folks believe the incubator can ever be completed as it is now? >> >> If you believe yes, please let me know why or how we can achieve that goal. >> >> Otherwise my recommendation is to move Wave to GitHub and close the >> incubation until the community around Wave has grown. >> >> Thoughts? >> >> Christian >> >> >> --- >> http://www.grobmeier.de >> @grobmeier >> GPG: 0xA5CC90DB >>