I find the proposal interesting too. I gave it a lot of though and I am considering getting involved as well. I have a question however for the proponents and supporters of the project.

What makes this project different than (almost) all the other ASF projects is that it has a high(er) barrier to entry in terms of hardware requirements. The reality is that such a project has little chances of becoming a viable competitor in the industry without strong support from companies like Citrix (and I salute their commitment). Will such resources be made available to the whole community, how was this envisioned?

Thanks,
Hadrian



On 04/04/2012 04:22 PM, Mohammad Nour El-Din wrote:
On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 10:20 PM, Alex Karasulu<akaras...@apache.org>  wrote:

On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 8:55 PM, Matt Hogstrom<m...@hogstrom.org>  wrote:

The proposal looks good.  I'm excited that the community is looking to
grow at the ASF.  I'm working on similar technology in my day job at IBM
and am interested in getting involved.  Happy to mentor if you need,
although, it has quite a large list now as I look at the Wiki.


The number of mentors should not be an issue. As stated before, in other
threads, the number of mentors is unbounded and AOO has 8 as an example.

The perspective podling should not feel that the list is too long - more
mentors and interest is a good thing. We have much to do, the project is
not small, and it would be nice to see the community gracefully pass thru
incubation as fast as posible in accordance with incubator standards. More
mentors might help in this regard.


Indeed



--
Best Regards,
-- Alex





--
Hadrian Zbarcea
Principal Software Architect
Talend, Inc
http://coders.talend.com/
http://camelbot.blogspot.com/

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