On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 10:12 AM, Leo Simons wrote:
> But I guess it does meet the minimum size. If 3 is not enough, what
> number is? If it does become a problem, there's an attic process.
The project is already in the process of adding another committer. I
have every intention to put him on the
Hey hey,
On Mon, Jan 9, 2012 at 9:39 AM, Martijn Dashorst
wrote:
> Now the big question: is Etch a candidate for graduating to TLP?
>
> I think it is, given the facts. It will be a TLP with issues of
> activity, but so far user questions, development questions are
> answered and releases are cut.
I'll give it a couple of more days for folks to look into this, then
I'll propose the community to start work on graduation.
Martijn
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 5:30 AM, Niclas Hedhman wrote:
> +1 to graduate. This is a project in a fierce space as Martijn noted,
> and I think "incubating" is hamper
+1 to graduate. This is a project in a fierce space as Martijn noted,
and I think "incubating" is hampering its attractiveness. It will
become a swim or sink challenge as TLP, but doubt the forecast is any
better of staying here.
On Mon, Jan 9, 2012 at 7:39 PM, ant elder wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 9, 2
On Mon, Jan 9, 2012 at 8:39 AM, Martijn Dashorst
wrote:
> Etch is a cross-platform, language- and transport-independent
> framework for building and consuming network services. The Etch
> toolset includes a network service description language, a compiler,
> and binding libraries for a variety of
Just as an aside: I intend on staying with the PMC to provide
oversight as a Member (and being a familiar Mentor), provided the Etch
community wants me to tag along.
Martijn
On Mon, Jan 9, 2012 at 9:39 AM, Martijn Dashorst
wrote:
> Etch is a cross-platform, language- and transport-independent
>
Etch is a cross-platform, language- and transport-independent
framework for building and consuming network services. The Etch
toolset includes a network service description language, a compiler,
and binding libraries for a variety of programming languages. It
currently supports C, C# and Java. Supp