Hey Karl,

I'm not really sure about the other process steps tbh, but I really would
like to give your code a shot; but
https://bitbucket.org/The_Alchemist/spring-event-plusplus still gives me a
"You do not have access to this repository."

Kind regards,
Andreas

On Wed, Oct 26, 2011 at 00:20, Karl Pietrzak <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 6:07 AM, Toni Menzel <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hi Karl,
>>
>> Glad you consider OPS4J as a possible project home.
>> Traditionally you start with an Account (Jira/Confluence on
>> team.ops4j.org) and start hacking in your so called laboratory (an open
>> to anyone yet open to anyone without telling or asking) SVN folder at
>> scm.ops4j.org. After some time you head over to the Mailinglist and start
>> explaining your project, start (if you have not already) documenting on the
>> wiki and make move the codebase to "/projects" on OPS4J, at that point it
>> would be an official OPS4J project.
>> Now stop if you already head over. This was until 2010. Free open source
>> repositories are a commodity now. So there's Github/Bitbucket/Googlecode and
>> others providing all you need for running a project (issue tracker, wiki,
>> SCM etc.)
>>
>
> Thank you, Toni!
>
> Well, in that time OPS4J has changed as well. We moved the entire codebase
>> (project status) to Github. (I am sure you know, its
>> http://github.org/ops4j ).
>>  What you get from OPS4J today is a project home with probably better
>> visibility than fighting alone (using OPS4J name), an existing direct
>> pipeline for Maven Central Distribution, a friendly community of
>> contributors consisting of apache committers, Qi4J leaders, NoSQL
>> professionals amongst others and of cause infrastructure like Atlassian
>> Studio & Hudson CI.
>>
>> Guess i don't need to sell it here, its just to explain the change OPS4J
>> did with the rise of Github and others. (SCM => Commodity).
>>
>> So today its best to write about your project, what it is about, what the
>> contributors are, potential audience, technical background, motivation,
>> whatever. Remember, its not a test to evaluate IF you can join OPS4J, its
>> about getting to know the project at all. After that we think about the
>> naming  (possibly a new member of "Pax" ?) and there we are: push to
>> github.org/ops4j, create Jira Project and Confluence Site, done. There
>> you are.
>>
>> btw.. Welcome !! ;)
>>
>
> Thank you again, Tony, for the explanation and details.
>
> About my project:
>
>    - Code
>       - currently at
>       https://bitbucket.org/The_Alchemist/spring-event-plusplus
>    - What it is about
>       - greatly improves Spring's support for event-driven apps
>    - what the contributors are
>       - just me for now ;)
>    - potential audience
>       - every Spring developer that uses ApplicationEvent
>    - technical background
>       - Java
>       - Spring
>       - concurrency
>       - NLP (natural language processing)
>       - IR (information retrieval)
>       - Python
>       - garbage collection
>    - motivation
>       - originally a port of
>       http://code.google.com/p/spring-custom-annotations/, but now it's
>       improved to support Spring 3 and has new features
>
> As Toni says, SCMs are a commodity now, so that's not what interests me in
> OPS4J.
>
> The philosophy is very interesting and especially complimentary for this
> project (a Maven plugin), IMHO.
>
> P.S. My JIRA username is 'the_alchemist'.  Can I create  JIRA project
> because my project comes out of the Laboratory?
>
> _______________________________________________
> general mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.ops4j.org/mailman/listinfo/general
>
>
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