Should that be a new thread? I certainly see value in a release of the basic feed parsing/producing code before the rest is done (the rest being something that needs to be put up somewhere... Jira or a Wiki... validation, server-side stuff, etc.)
-Stephen On 6/20/06, Garrett Rooney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 6/20/06, James M Snell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > It may sound a bit self-serving in that I wrote most of the code, but > the current implementation could be snapshot'd for a first milestone > fairly easily given a bit more work on the docs, samples, and test cases. > > I'm not quite certain how the milestone process works yet, tho. > Garrett/Paul, can you advise? Well, generally speaking the release process works like this: 1) The project needs to determine what the actual goals of a given release are. 2) Once that happens, we scramble around making sure all the Is are dottend and Ts are crossed with regard to legal stuff and all that jazz. 3) Then, when we've hit the goals for that first milestone, someone rolls a release (makes a tag in Subversion, creates the release tarballs/zips, etc) and puts it up someplace people can get at it. 4) The project votes whether or not to let the release out into the wild. 5) Assuming the project decides everything is cool, we get the incubator PMC to vote on the release. If they accept it, then we actually roll it out for users. So, the first step for us is to figure out what the actual goals for our first release are. -garrett
-- Stephen Duncan Jr www.stephenduncanjr.com
