Mike Moller wrote, > I'm also sure that we all wish Patrick and his family the best > possible outcome that can be achieved in their personal circumstances. > Having said that I believe it behooves us all as a community to be > cautious in attempting to move PmWiki forward from here. At the very > least common courtesy requires that we seek Patrick's contribution to > these discussions before anyone seeks to put any new project > arrangements in concrete form. >
Amen. When this thread started, I thought that seeking Pm's contribution was precisely what we were doing. Evidently his family situation is serious enough that he's away from email for a few days. I look forward to reading his response, which will be so tactful and insightful as to put us all to shame, as usual! :-) However, at risk of being insensitive, I think this kind of absence is precisely what this discussion is about. Even if everyone in Pm's life recovers fully today and is 100% healthy for the rest of their natural lives, which I devoutly hope, what happens then? At some point Pm will become unavailable again, and PmWiki is bigger than just Pm. There are hundreds if not thousands of sites relying on this software's continued development -- even if there is a moratorium on new core features (which is, in effect, what happened in 2008), the hackers are not standing still, so we will need security releases. If all core releases have to go through Pm, and he's unavailable, then we'll either have to produce patches to fix the security holes, or release unofficial versions, or fork the code, none of which is a good solution. Thus far PmWiki has been amazingly stable and resilient and resistant to hackers (when configured appropriately). In contrast, Drupal just had a security release yesterday that sent me scrambling to update a dozen sites, and it has one of those every few weeks! It's much like the difference between Mac OS and Windows -- both Mac users and PmWiki users have good reason to feel smug and invulnerable. But read the news: Apple is about to lose its visionary leader. Fortunately Apple anticipated that that would happen, and there are other leaders waiting in the wings. The PmWiki community is not prepared for that, as far as I can tell. I totally agree with Pm's vision for the software. But the great thing about a vision is, it can be *shared* by more than one person. So can leadership and decision-making. I think that as a community, we have a responsibility to each other and to our users to anticipate the inevitable. With Pm's blessing, of course. :-) Ben Stallings Interdependent Web _______________________________________________ pmwiki-users mailing list [email protected] http://www.pmichaud.com/mailman/listinfo/pmwiki-users
