Okay, so now that I'm out from the crushing workload, I can get things done. Did I? Well, I think so. On with the update!
*What Got Done?* All tickets on trac,turbogears.org are now on SF.net. You can view them at https://sourceforge.net/p/turbogears2/tickets/ . It's only a single bullet point, but it's a big one. The migration is not perfect, since it had to be done by hand. I've got some formatting errors, definitely. Still, they're all there. I even managed to actually close a few, since I'd already done fixes for them, but didn't know there were tickets in place for them. *Where Are We Now?* In pretty decent shape, overall. Source code and issues were the biggest pieces we had sitting on the WebFaction server, and those are now moved to SF. *What's Going To Get Done This Week?* Plans for this week are simple: I'm going to work on getting the new server finalized. We'll get Trac migrated and turned read only. We'll get the docs and the private indexes up and running. We'll get some more content on the tgext.pages site, including a status page which people can use to see more of what's going on. I'll even start (once that page is done) updating that page and this email at the same time. I don't know if we can complete all of the migration from WebFaction this week, but I'm going to try. If so, we'll finally be working on producing actual code again by next week, with the 2.0.4 release imminent right after that. I saw a few more high profile tickets for 2.1.1 that we'll need to resolve, so that will likely take another week or two. All in all, I'm pleased with where we are. It feels like we're moving. I will apologize for this status being as short as it is. Only getting one thing done (no matter how important that one thing is) tends to make the whole report kinda small looking. -- Michael J. Pedersen My IM IDs: Jabber/[email protected], ICQ/103345809, AIM/pedermj022171 Yahoo/pedermj2002, MSN/[email protected] ---------- All humans fail, in both great and small ways we fail continually. Machines fail too. Computers are machines that are managed by humans, the fallout from failure can be spectacular. Your responsibility is to deal with failure, to anticipate it and to eliminate it as far as is humanly and economically wise to achieve. Are your actions part of the problem or part of the solution? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TurboGears" 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/turbogears?hl=en.

