It is a long time to wait.  

But consider this, the Curator project is a podling and so it's under 
probation.  Hence the second 72 hour vote.  Once this podling graduates the 
second vote/review will no longer be needed.

Why 72 hours?  The ASF is a volunteer organization whose membership spans the 
globe.  To be respectful of other members' time we allow 72 hours so that 
thoughtful reviews can take place.


Regards,
Alan


On May 8, 2013, at 11:42 AM, Jordan Zimmerman <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> FWIW - Apache needs to consider being more agile. Waiting two 72 hour periods 
> is a LONG time these days for a release.
> 
> -JZ
> 
> On May 8, 2013, at 11:32 AM, Chip Childers <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> On Wed, May 08, 2013 at 11:04:18AM -0700, Jordan Zimmerman wrote:
>>> There have been no votes on the Curator release on @general and no 
>>> comments. Is that normal? Can we move to release with just our group's 
>>> votes? I'd hope to close voting tomorrow (72 hours).
>>> 
>>> -JZ
>> 
>> You have 3 +1 votes already.  When I was release managing for Apache
>> CloudStack (as a podling), we would usually come into the IPMC vote
>> with 3 mentor votes already binding at the IPMC level.  This meant that
>> we were ready to just sit for 72 hours and then do the release.
>> 
>> So consider it a good thing!
> 

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