Sorry but it was me who managed not only the graduation, but everything else. CI server down for months. The website was out of date for many weeks after the graduation. The VM instance happened to be broken or stopped several times when people wanted to test it during conferences. I had to ask Reza to start it. At least one on this list who also contributed was willing to help, but nobody bothered to accept his help till I took another management responsibility in my own hands and started a ballot which we fortunately.
Records in this and other threads speak for themselves. The evidence is right, no need to deny any of that. The false impression that I was "co PMC Chair" by Reza himself says enough. I WAS doing what he volunteered to do all the time;-) I don't see a problem to have him as committer/PMC member, should he decide to stay, but e.g. Bertrand until someone really qualified should volunteer again was clearly a better choice to act as PMC chair. I did most of the other managing like votes for new committers, etc. Happy to help with that as well. Cheers, Werner On Mon, Apr 20, 2015 at 12:38 PM, Bertrand Delacretaz < [email protected]> wrote: > On Sun, Apr 19, 2015 at 5:42 PM, Reza Naghibi <[email protected]> wrote: > > ...Instead of focusing on writing > > and releasing software, all my time and energy is spent on how to manage > > Werner.... > > I think we now have abundant evidence that you and Werner cannot work > together - evaluating who's right and who's wrong does not help much, > but maybe we can find a creative solution that would cause you to > reconsider, at least temporarily. > > How about defining a "perimeter" in our code and specs that Werner is > not allowed to touch or discuss? It can be as simple as a subtree in > our source code tree, and a wiki subtree. > > Combined with a ban (amicable or formal) of email arguments between > you guys, this might be a workable solution, that we can try for say 3 > months to see if things improve. > > That's unusual in an Apache project, and if this team was larger > things would probably self-regulate, but with such a small team it's > hard to find a balance without resorting to such artificial barriers. > > What do people think? > > -Bertrand >
