Thanks, I will do just that! :-) -- João Neves
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 13:13, Yuri Z <[email protected]> wrote: > Yep, WIAB is currently migrating to Apache, however, that is not a obstacle > if you willing to contribute. http://www.waveprotocol.org has the info to > get you started. From my personal experience, the best way to contribute is > to install the WIAB server, run the web client and see what bothers you. It > could be a missing feature or annoying bug. And the good news are - there > are plenty of both. If you - decided to take on something - make sure to > check the open issues at > http://code.google.com/p/wave-protocol/issues/list to > ensure that no one else is already working on it, and if not - open a new > issue to let everybody else know that you want to get started. Well, the > issues might migrate soon to the Apache Jira and the source to Apache SVN > but i guess you got the idea. > Don't be afraid to submit a patch, even if it is not accepted right away, > you ll get constructive feedback, and IMHO, the only way to get a real > feedback on your attempt to contribute, is by submitting a patch. > Have fun! > > 2011/2/24 João Neves <[email protected]> > > > Hi everyone, > > > > I've been reading about the migration of Wave into the ASF's incubator > > projects for a while and I've been really interested in messing around > with > > Wave for quite a while. My involvement with Wave has been somewhat > distant > > lately, although I've built a somewhat successful robot when Google first > > announced it (Wikify) and I'd be interested in delving deeper into the > > actual core of Wave. > > > > I've seen that at this stage the primary concern is probably switching > all > > the infrastructure around the project, but I'd like to know how could I > get > > started in getting involved with this project. :-) > > > > Cheers! > > > > -- > > João Neves > > >
