On 2005.02.08, Zoran Vasiljevic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > To be clear about this, I am not simply going to collate everyone's > > responses together. I will be looking for common themes amongst all > > the responses so that the most people benefit from the improvements > > that we make in 2005. If something you expressed interest in > > doesn't make it into the first plan, it's because there wasn't > > enough interest or support for that particular aspect. I will do my > > best to be fair and impartial about this. > > Seems fair. I assume you will be putting responses bypassing this > public list in some place where everybody can see them, right?
Unfortunately, no. I thought about this and decided that I want to respect people's desire to remain anonymous in order to encourage their continued contribution. I hope this makes sense to everyone. People who wish their position to be public should do so by posting it in a public place (a website they control, mailing it to this mailing list, etc. -- but please, email me a copy or a link directly so I know about it). Everyone will have to put a certain amount of trust in me that I will be fair and honest about this. I don't think that's too much to ask and I don't think I've ever given reason for people to not trust me or believe that I lack the necessary integrity. > > > What I appreciate about AS is its stability, Tcl integration level > > > and infrastructure allowing me to write concurrent applications > > > with ease. The AS speaking the http protocol is nice, but not the > > > main reason why I'm using it. > > > > What is the main reason why you use AOLserver? > > Well, I said this above, roughly. If you like, the main would be: > > "infrastructure allowing me to write concurrent applications with ease" > > Accent is: "concurrent applications" not necessarily web-biz related. > Rather, a versatile swiss-army-knife plug-in-the-module-and-run type > of beast. The fact it does so *nicely* marry advanced low-level socket > and threading caps with Tcl makes it ideal for all sorts of things. Great, thanks. > But, as said, vision statement is important. This will clarify many > things and people will know what to expect and can act accordingly. Great. Lets see what we come up with in March. Now, the burden of responsibility lies with EVERYONE to communicate their needs and desires for the future of the AOLserver Project. This isn't an "AOL problem" -- this is a responsibility issue of everyone involved in the project, AOL or otherwise. If you don't ask for it, you will likely not get it. Period. -- Dossy -- Dossy Shiobara mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Panoptic Computer Network web: http://www.panoptic.com/ "He realized the fastest way to change is to laugh at your own folly -- then you can let go and quickly move on." (p. 70) -- AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/ To Remove yourself from this list, simply send an email to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> with the body of "SIGNOFF AOLSERVER" in the email message. You can leave the Subject: field of your email blank.
