Raphaël Luta wrote:

Excellent post! It is nice to see somebody take the time to review the actual proposal.

Overall, there is clearly strong interest in AJAX at the ASF, whether it be based on Zimbra or Dojo or whatever. Furthermore, the proposal needs to be revised, particularly to incorporate the people who have expressed an interest in participating and creating ties to other projects.

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Criteria
========

* Meritocracy:

  I don't believe it looking at the committer list.
  Who's going to argue with his VP of engineering ? To create a real
  meritocracy, you can't have an established hierarchy in the committership.

Valid concern - needs to be worked.

* Community:

  none

A bit overstated. There is a community, but it has yet to be incubated and certified as following the Apache way.

* Core developers:

  no existing Apache committer or Apache member

That's the initial proposal. The proposal was immediately was met with several volunteers.

* Alignment:

  no simple mission statement but trying two roll out 2 complementary
  sub projects into a single community.

My fault for not catching that one. I have stated that the goal is to build a single community. See below.

Warning signs
=============

* Orphaned products:

  Apparently no

I'm not certain what you are trying to say here.

* Inexperience with open-source:

  Limited experience if I judge by the number of OSS related hits tied to the
  proposed committer names on Google. Only 3 names get some hits.
  You can also how Zimbra as a corp currently gets it here:
  http://www.zimbra.com/community/

Valid concern.

* Homogenous developers/salaried developers:

  Definitely yes, all work for 2 companies with strong hierarchical ties in
  the proposed committer base

Again, the proposal was immediately met with volunteers. I will state that everybody involved fully understands that the current level of diversity certainly would not meet the incubator's exit criteria for a project - and everybody supports the goal of building a diverse community.

* No ties to Apache products:

  True

Again, immediately upon seeing the initial post, several people suggested a number of possible ties.

* Fascination with Apache brand:

  True, just see prc@ activity.

I understand how you could see it that way. For those not on the PRC, I sent a draft email yesterday which essentially said that discussions were underway with the ASF and gave an overview of what AJAX is.

To help you see it another way, take a look at the following link:

http://ajaxian.com/archives/2005/12/apache_ajax_too.html

AJAX is hot. People outside are watching. IBM and Zimbra will undoubtably get a lot of press people asking questions. My experience has been that such people are well trained in saying "no comment", but the fact is that there is interest, and at some point it makes sense to meet such interest with facts.

As is, I can't see a single reason to support the proposal ans see several to
vote a strong -1 on it in its current form :

- The proposal is too large to incubate, it's hard enough to create a community
  from scratch around a single well-defined goal and codebase, rolling 2
  together is suicide in my book.

I don't mean to minimize the concern, but we have incubated larger. As we have seen in this and other donations - IP lawyers are very interested in clearly delineating the precise origins of each component. As such, we've overstressed the separate nature of these pieces.

Just to be clear: the goal is to build one community.

- I don't see any benefit for the ASF and several drawbacks (more
  hard work and strain on resources, possible PR complications, additionnal
  strain on friendly relations with other OSS groups like Eclipse)

There definitely is interest in AJAX at the ASF. If not Zimbra, then Dojo. And as Sanjiva and Dims have eloquently put it

    I have no patience for any kind of "this space is mine, you keep to
    yours" type nonsense. I totally agree that the only discussion here
    should be does ASF want to take this on or not, not on whether
    Eclipse folks feel it "rightfully" belongs there or not.

and

    I really don't mind if Apache gets into Eclipse tools/plugins. We do
    have Eclipse plugins in Axis2 project. We also have another plugin
    for running Geronimo inside WTP. So it's not a new thing and the
    proposal has my +1.  Please pardon me for being blunt, I don't
    really care about what happens inside IBM/Eclipse or who said
    what/when. All i know is that we have a proposal in front of us and
    as a community we take it or leave it or ask for changes if we think
    they are needed.

- There's no mentor yet ! Bad sign...

Again, two volunteers within moments of posting alone.

- The odds of this project of successfully exiting the Incubator based on the
  diversity of community criteria seem very low to me: there are too many
  initial committers and most of them will have strong internal communication
  channels which will be invisible from the community.

This will all move to mailing lists.

- I don't believe most of the proposed committers would get committership
  on their own merit and I would hate the Incubator to become an easy way to
  bypass the meritocratic model of the ASF: work at IBM and get a free
  committership when they donate the codebase to the ASF ! Most of the time
  you end up with paid-for-committers that only last as long as they're told
  to work on the project. (This is not pure paranoia ;) just look at Pluto if
  you want to see it in effect)

Valid concern.

In summary I see this proposal as a high risk, low value offer to the ASF
and would definitely pass on it.

I don't want to minimize the risk, but I do think you have underestimated the interest/value.

- Sam Ruby

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