On Mar 9, 2011, at 9:50 AM, Tim Lesher wrote:

> On Wed, Mar 9, 2011 at 01:15, Stefan Behnel <stefan...@behnel.de> wrote:
>> Actually, why not put up a web page of "upcoming changes" somewhere, that
>> lists major decisions with user impact that were taken on python-dev?
>> Including a link to the relevant discussion and decision. Often enough,
>> decisions are taken inside of huge mailing list threads that get off-topic
>> before someone has "the right idea" and everyone who's still there to listen
>> agrees. Even for people lurking around on python-dev, it's easy enough to
>> miss these moments.
> 
> We used to do biweekly-ish Python-Dev summaries for this reason.
> 
> The original links at python.org appear to be down, but I found an
> example mirrored at
> ftp://ftp.ntua.gr/mirror/python/dev/summary/2005-02-01_2005-02-14.html
> 
> Would resuming these and putting them back on python.org address the issue?
> 
> It's been on my back burner for about two years now, but I want to
> make sure I can keep up before diving in again.

As Jesse mentioned, this topic came up on the board mailing list recently for a 
reason completely unrelated to this thread. As a result of that discussion, the 
board has asked me in my capacity as PSF Communications Director to help the 
python-dev crew set up a blog (or other forum) through which you can 
communicate news about major projects undertaken during development. This would 
be in addition to, rather than a replacement for, individual developer blogs, 
and would provide an official channel for the team to talk about projects 
publicly after they are complete. 

Topics proposed as part of the discussion on the board list included the hg 
migration, the new developer's guide, changes to the Mac installer, and the 
updated release process for 3.2. Those are just examples, though. This 
deprecation would make another good topic, and I'm sure everyone can think of 
others. Consider the blog as an analog to the PEP process. Where PEPs come at 
the beginning of a project, a blog post would come at a major milestones or the 
completion of a project.

The original request from the board was for the communications team to write 
the messages, but I think it is more appropriate for the people doing the work 
to talk about it. I will provide editorial guidance to anyone that wants me to 
read their posts before they are published, and I will administer the tool if 
needed (granting access and moderating comments that look like spam).

I asked Michael to add this topic to the agenda for the language summit 
tomorrow to get early feedback about whether this group thinks it is a good 
idea. I was going to hold discussion for the mailing list until after that 
meeting, but since the topic came up on its own please go ahead and respond 
here with questions or comments, especially if you won't be in Atlanta 
tomorrow. Let's table discussion of tools for now, though, because I want to 
make sure there is enough support for the project before we spend too much 
energy on implementation details.

Doug

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