For the time being, all we can expect is people to feel an 'inner urge' to put 
their personal time into this. Again: where would Linux stand today if early 
adopters had waited for support contracts or full-time positions to feed them? 
No, you must simply feel, or even stronger, you must *know* it is worthwhile.

I think simply collecting what is coming in from upstream and cutting 
(pre-)releases from that in predictable frequency would incredibly help. Why 
not settle for something similar to what OS did and Ubuntu does, cut a release 
for every quarter, name it OpenIndiana 2013.3, 2013.6 etc. and put in all that 
is coming in from illumos, kernel and ZFS repositories? That process should be 
put under continous build control if possible to ease handling. Complement that 
with nightly builds and we're in the game again.

People will rather use it when they see activity, users will eventually be 
supporters and enough users and supporters could mean a business case. And a 
business case could mean support contracts.

Someone around with experience in building prestables who could assist setting 
up a scripted build and maybe setting up a CI? Someone to share necessary 
infrastructure to host this? Then why not just start moving?

Cheers
Stefan

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