Just to propose an alternative idea to the Digg-like voting system, how about restricting commiters to only working on specific issues? So instead of being a free-for-all where people just go in and pick and choose the issues that they find the most interesting, important, or fun, to work on (as this is largely personal opinion), have it setup so they can only work on issues assigned to them by some one with greater permissions then them. I know, from experience, that this is how many commercial software shops operate when it comes to bug reports and feature requests and it can be quite efficient. The only remaining issue is to make sure the proper issues are assigned, and assigned to the proper person. I personally feel a lot of the problems being discussed tend to stem from a free-for-all setup where people can work on whatever issues they like. Perhaps treating Drupal as a regular commercial product would be more beneficial (although I do like the voting idea, I haven't seen that idea proposed for something like this before). As a disclaimer, while I've been using Drupal for over a year, I'm still new to the list and have not been very active in the community yet, so there is a good chance I don't know what I'm talking about in regards to how bugs are currently handled. But from an outsiders perspective this is how it appears. Tomas Fulopp wrote:
I think this is a very good idea - potentially accelerating testing and committing the most desperately needed patches.
On Fri, Oct 31, 2008 at 4:42 PM, Darren Oh <darrenoh@sidepotsinternational.com <mailto:darrenoh@sidepotsinternational.com>> wrote:
Could we add a Digg-like button to issues that would promote them to a popular issues page?
On Oct 31, 2008, at 10:46 AM, Earnie Boyd wrote:
The only solution to the issue is for every development@drupal.org <mailto:development@drupal.org> user to keep a watchful eye to http://drupal.org/project/issues?projects=3060&states=8&priorities=&categori... <http://drupal.org/project/issues?projects=3060&states=8&priorities=&categories=&users=> to review the patches submitted. Testing and watching for coding standards then setting the status to RTBC so that the committers can then have a look.
I created myself a service that will notify me of the changes via an aggregated feed and notification by email of the changes. The feed is scheduled for once every ten minutes so that I keep up to date. Sure I might miss one or two that someone else has set to the status something else but then that one is already reviewed.
If your interested, feel free to use the service with the understanding that the service is still in alpha/beta stage but the data is coming in like mad. There are between 5 to 50 requested reviews in a day. I can't get to them all. The service is hosted at http://r-feed.com and is accepting registrations for you convenience.