It would be helpful to have more discussion about what is happening on this 
mailing list.

I’m your last active Mentor and I joined only when it seemed like the start of 
incubation was blocked.

Please show the activity with some visible direction.

> On Oct 15, 2020, at 11:59 AM, Sree Vaddi <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> Heron will continue to live long.
> It has it's own place in the stream processing world among other competing 
> technologies.The ever increasing data has stretched competitions to the 
> limits of breaking.
> 
> In addition:
> In production at the creating company and others around the world.Best open 
> source alternative to Google Dataflow, from the recent talks.
> Higher freedom to customizations, makes it attractive for innovation.
> 27 continuous monthly meetups.
> Slack is active.Mailing lists are active.
> 455 meetup members and counting.40 linkedin group members and counting.
> 
> All of these, just by a few bunch of us.
> 
> It is too early for 'retirement' talk, IMHO.
> Let's focus on, making it to TLP.
> Taking one task or part of it at a time.
> 
> 
> Thank you./Sree 
> 
>    On Thursday, October 15, 2020, 11:00:10 AM PDT, H W 
> <[email protected]> wrote:  
> 
> The community size and activity look steady rather than dwindling. The
> heronstreaming slack is still active. The conversations/meetups/discussions
> keep going well.
> As for 'retirement' I think that would be premature
> 
> On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 10:29 AM Ning Wang <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> Hmm.
>> 
>> Community isn't very active, but there are still works going on (python,
>> k8s/helm, etc) and a few users relying on the project. IMO it is too early
>> to retire.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On Wed, Oct 14, 2020 at 5:57 PM Josh Fischer <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi All,
>>> 
>>> It seems the community is dwindling for Heron.  I think it is time to
>> start
>>> a discussion on retiring the podling.
>>> 
>>> Thoughts?
>>> 
>>> - Josh
>>> 
>> 

Reply via email to