> Does everyone have an account in the Apache Jira? I do have an account on Jira .. just checked ... my user name is mrinal
_ Mrinal On Tue, Feb 17, 2009 at 1:32 PM, Hirsch, Richard <[email protected] > wrote: > Does each person want to add their own items to Jira or should we collect / > discuss them via mailing list and then after a few days, I can collect them > and add them to Jira. > > Does everyone have an account in the Apache Jira? If you don't have a user, > then we can't assign tasks. You don't have to submit an iCLA to have a > Apache Jira account. I didn't see Mrinal or Anne. Could you both create > users on Jira. > > D. > > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: Hirsch, Richard > Gesendet: Dienstag, 17. Februar 2009 08:54 > An: [email protected] > Betreff: AW: Next Sprint > > I agree that Jira is probably best place to base the sprints. I think the > current tasks are too broad. > > For example, ESME-6 ( https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ESME-6 ) is > "Support for Twitter API". Should we break this down into smaller Jira > tasks. If you look at the official wiki from twitter ( > http://apiwiki.twitter.com/REST+API+Documentation), there are already > categories ("Status Methods", "User Methods", etc.). That might be easier. > > Ideas? > > P.S. I also like the way the twitter wiki is structured to document their > REST API. Maybe we can use it as a basis for our documentation. > > D. > > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: Vassil Dichev [mailto:[email protected]] > Gesendet: Dienstag, 17. Februar 2009 07:08 > An: [email protected] > Betreff: Re: Next Sprint > > > I read that David isn't going to have a lot of time for this sprint. > > What about Vassil and Darren? > > As usual, I have a moderate amount of time in the hours after son goes > to sleep :) > > > Besides the obvious choice of work on the UI (where we are way behind), > > REST API and Twitter API, does anyone else have other suggestions. > > Twitter API is what I'm going to concentrate on, my todo list there is > fairly big and I don't want to bite off more than I can chew. Besides, > most other tasks influence all of ESME (groups, permissions), so it's > necessary for more than one person to agree on how we want it > implemented. > > To summarize my view on the topic of whether sprints are useful- like > Darren, I also think it's beneficial to set some short-term goals, > even if we're not 100% successful. One planning problem here is that > everyone is moving at a different pace every sprint. Prioritized lists > would be of real help here. JIRA could fit quite nicely in this case, > I think. >
