@Luciano >We have been granted permission to work on a release with proper disclaimers, but I believe none of these disclaimers are in place yet.
What are the proper disclaimers? Can you find out? It would be great if you submit a PR. On Fri, Apr 1, 2016 at 11:04 AM, Gino Bustelo <[email protected]> wrote: > Luciano, > > We can update our README, that is no problem. But consider that what we > are putting in Pypi has a "dev" suffix, the convention on that site that is > analogous to a "SNAPSHOT" suffix. > > I consider this as part of working on a release, since pip installation is > the preferred way that the Jupyter community installs extensions. Also, > many of those stats are mainly us running tests. > > Thanks > > > > On Fri, Apr 1, 2016 at 10:23 AM, Luciano Resende <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> With my "mentor hat" on, I wonder how come we are advertising this as the >> official way to install Apache Toree, without having an official Apache >> Toree release ? >> >> To me, this is a big problem, first because this hasn't gone via any >> release review, and we already know we have ASL2.0 incompatible licenses >> with Toree. We have been granted permission to work on a release with >> proper disclaimers, but I believe none of these disclaimers are in place >> yet. >> >> Also, when I lookup Toree in Pypi https://pypi.python.org/pypi/toree, the >> stats seems more of a regular release (then just something that a dev >> would >> try to check something with the latest code). They also don't get updated >> nightly, which also gives the impression of stability that is available >> with a release. >> >> - *Downloads (All Versions):* >> - 84 downloads in the last day >> - 335 downloads in the last week >> - 1307 downloads in the last month >> >> I would really just ask to remove any non-release available artifacts >> related to Toree, but I would compromise if we make the necessary >> adjustments on the documentation and other sites to denote the "SNAPSHOT" >> type of release, and mention this is not an official release. And that we >> make the top priority of the community to make a release in the next few >> weeks. >> >> Thanks >> >> On Fri, Apr 1, 2016 at 5:38 AM, Gino Bustelo <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> > Pypi >> > >> > Gino B. >> > >> > > On Apr 1, 2016, at 6:46 AM, Luciano Resende <[email protected]> >> > wrote: >> > > >> > >> On Friday, April 1, 2016, Gino Bustelo <[email protected]> wrote: >> > >> >> > >> Pip installs downloads Toree >> > > >> > > >> > > Dowloads it from where? >> > > >> > > >> > >> Jupiter Toree install - installs Toree as a kernel on your Jupyter >> > >> installation. >> > > How does it know what to install, is there a descriptor in jupiter ? >> Or >> > it >> > > reads it from toree ? >> > > >> > > >> > >> Gino B. >> > >> >> > >>>> On Mar 31, 2016, at 10:11 PM, Luciano Resende < >> [email protected] >> > >>> <javascript:;>> wrote: >> > >>> >> > >>> I was going trough the READ.me and found various steps like >> > >>> >> > >>> pip install toree >> > >>> jupyter toree install >> > >>> >> > >>> As I am not so familiar with Jupyter, could someone please give me >> more >> > >>> details about what is happening under the covers when I invoke these >> > two >> > >>> commands to install Jupyter and Toree ? >> > >>> >> > >>> Thanks >> > >>> >> > >>> -- >> > >>> Luciano Resende >> > >>> http://twitter.com/lresende1975 >> > >>> http://lresende.blogspot.com/ >> > > >> > > >> > > -- >> > > Sent from my Mobile device >> > >> >> >> >> -- >> Luciano Resende >> http://twitter.com/lresende1975 >> http://lresende.blogspot.com/ >> > >
