benevolent?

On Dec 28, 4:01 pm, Christopher Steel <[email protected]> wrote:
> While it is not required due to the nature of his position, I do
> hereby officially recognize Massimo Di Pierro as Web2py's Benevolent
> Dictator for Life as is in keeping with the Pythonic and opensource
> tradition and in recognition of his leadership and nurturing role in
> the development and maintenance of the Web2py project.
>
> Long Live Massimo!
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benevolent_Dictator_For_Life
>
> On Dec 28, 4:02 pm, Tim Alexander <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Then maybe a bit of info around massimo being the BDFL (python/linux,
> > benevolent dictator for life) being out there might work. As said before,
> > seems very much like a perception problem rather than something that will be
> > solved via some sort of company or group running things rather than a single
> > person.
>
> > The current setup works great for me, but identifying that there are a few
> > people (the list above is awesome) who are web2py experts, and very
> > experienced in the code, even if there is a BDFL who is gatekeeper, and
> > setting that as the expectation/perception going forward might well fix
> > perception without any changes neccesary. Perhaps an "about the developers"
> > page or something? Or an explanation of some sort on the web2py site?
>
> > On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 2:42 PM, Jonathan Lundell <[email protected]>wrote:
>
> > > On Dec 28, 2010, at 11:54 AM, VP wrote:
>
> > > > I love the fact that if I have a problem with web2py and asked a
> > > > question, Massimo will likely answer it.  But the perceptual problem
> > > > of web2py is a single-person effort is real.  Massimo fixes most of
> > > > the bugs (it seems so).  Massimo is mainly responsible for PR.
> > > > Massimo is in charge of experts4solution (it appears so).  Massimo is
> > > > mainly in charge of documentation (the book) (it appears so).
>
> > > > Note that these are not necessary bad things.  But the concern is
> > > > real. Now, you can say this issue should not be a concern (i.e. we are
> > > > okay with the current setup).  Then that's a different perspective, a
> > > > different story.
>
> > > Offhand, I can think of at least three major projects that have a single
> > > person in charge, in one way or another: Linux, OpenBSD and Python. I 
> > > don't
> > > know much about the OpenBSD and Python patch processes, but all Linux
> > > patches go through Linus. So in that sense, Massimo's role is not
> > > unprecedented.
>
>

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