Seems the right thing - but probably a little late as all the projects frantically found other hosting.
Happily, with DVCS it is really really easy to shift all the source code and not lose a single piece of history. On Feb 6, 11:28 am, Tor Norbye <[email protected]> wrote: > In our last newscast we reported that Kenai had been killed. > Apparently this isn't the case. The following bulletin was just posted > on kenai.com, on their blog and sent out to project admins. It sounds > like Kenai.com lives on, just using a different domain name - they are > migrating java.net to the kenai technology. > > "IMPORTANT UPDATE > (Feb. 5th 2010) > > Gentlepeople, > > In an effort to get information out to the Kenai community quickly, > while trying to manage the integration of our two companies, I think > we did a poor job at communicating our plans for Kenai.com to you. I > would like to remedy that now. Our strategy is simple. We don't > believe it makes sense to continue investing in multiple hosted > development sites that are basically doing the same thing. Our plan is > to shut down kenai.com and focus our efforts on java.net as the hosted > development community. We are in the process of migrating java.net to > the kenai technology. This means that any project currently hosted on > kenai.com will be able to continue as you are on java.net. We are > still working out the technical details, but the goal is to make this > migration as seamless as possible for the current kenai.com projects. > So in the meantime I suggest that you stay put on kenai.com and let us > work through the details and get back to you later this month. > > Thanks for your feedback and patience. > > Ted Farrell > Oracle Corporation" -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "The Java Posse" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/javaposse?hl=en.
