René,
What aspects of being the lead developer & website maintainer give you 
enjoyment and pride?And which parts of your roles are a bore or a nuisance to 
you?
I want to help you to find the job in the pygame community that gives you the 
most satisfaction and maximizes the impact of your talents. I do not want 
people to have unrealistic expectations of you though, and I want to maximize 
the impact of others' talents too.

Thanks,
Jason
On Monday, July 13, 2015 8:02 AM, René Dudfield <ren...@gmail.com> wrote:
 

Hi,

a few notes:
   
   - I have dropped the ball, but would like to finish the new website and get 
1.9.2 out the door.
   - pygame_sdl2 seems the best choice going forward. For backward compat 
reasons, platform support, and C/asm code is needed. Many things have been put 
into SDL and related libs already, and this is a good way to go to share with 
other SDL projects.
   - seul.org has only been used for the mailing list for a number of years (7 
years maybe?).   

   - there are many other considerations which the new website addresses. 
Reddit integration, and bitbucket is done. Also, fun is important, as is 
integration with youtube and other ways of sharing work (like playing music can 
be done on the new website too).   

   - I have done some thinking with Tom about how to do a migration with 
pygame_sdl2 to the pygame infrastructure.   

   - nothing has stopped contributors for 1.9.2 being released. Many people 
have admin access to the bitbucket repo, and there has been some work been done.
   - ... more to come.   



best,



On Mon, Jul 13, 2015 at 6:10 AM, Peter Shinners <p...@shinners.org> wrote:

Yes! I'm motivated to make some changes sooner than later. If we really need to 
we can do some amount of reverting.

I think it's time to move off of the seul.org hosting Pygame has had since day 
1. This was such a great choice back in 2004. But nowadays there's many options 
beyond sourceforge! As soon as we switch the DNS the pygame mailing list may be 
inaccessible.

I think the following things should be in order before switching.
1. New website with some amount of placeholders or redirects to the popular 
pages of the current site.
2. New forum or mailing option.
3. Get documentation on readthedocs.org?



On 07/12/2015 05:05 PM, Jason Marshall wrote:

René Dudfield, pygame's lead developer, has contributed significant Python, C 
and assembly code to pygame and has generously hosted the pygame.org website 
for years. We all should be thankful for that. However, René has not been 
active on this mailing list for almost 3 months. I guess that René has new 
priorities that have overtaken his interest in pygame, so I think that he 
should pass his leadership role to a new leader or leadership committee. (I'd 
prefer a leadership committee so that pygame's development would not be so 
susceptible to stalling if one person's priorities change.)

I have opinions on what the website's features should be and what pygame2 
should be, but I don't think that we're ready to discuss those topics yet. We 
need active leadership first. To me, the pygame leader is the person (or 
people) in control of the official pygame.org website. Fortunately, Pete 
Shinners is the person who keeps the pygame.org name registered, so, even if 
René remains inactive, it would be technically possible Pete to redirect the 
pygame.org name to a new official website that would be under different 
leadership.

So here's the question for Pete:
Pete, if René remains uninvolved, would you be willing to point pygame.org at a 
new website?

Jason

PS. Sorry about the coup d'état suggestion, René.




On Friday, July 10, 2015 10:05 PM, Peter Shinners <p...@shinners.org> wrote:


I haven't been paying close attention to Pygame, but it doesn't seem
controversial to say things have stalled. I haven't gotten much feedback
from Rene, but I'd like to give him time to put something together. Some
of the main things that may need help are:

* Getting 1.9.2 actually released
* Moving on to "Pygame 2", whatever that means
* Catch up on the Bitbucket pull requests
* Website replacement and love
* Migrate forum to Reddit (or community forum)

It seems there are still many great people involved with the Pygame
project. Perhaps I can help by getting those people the control they
need to make progress. I'm completely detached from things at this
point, so I don't have any context to jump in and try to change
anything. What parts of the project are going well these days?









  

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