On Mon, February 20, 2006 12:37, Karoly Negyesi wrote:
political message
Aside from Ber, I can barely remember anyone mentioning politics in regard Drupal. There will be an election in April here and I am seriously sick from even _hearing_ this word.
Okay, i will gladly call it something different. "Make noise around an issue"? "spread the word to get it reviewed"? I am *not* talking about bugs. IMO the system works great for that. We get a lot of them fixed. I am talking about "nice", more complex features. Anyone who disagrees with me that it is hardly impossible without killes-patience, or a cross-community frenzy like FAPI-team-ups to get anything bigger then a five liner in, please speak up.
So please stop and roll patches :)
Wat? even more patches to sit on my todolist? Some keywords: "codemonkeyXs/better archive system", "simple inline images", "online status by CSS classes", "let _links return structured data, the one-but oldest issue", "renice the upload modules code". Those are a few patches, from the top of my mind, that are around for a looong while. Got loads of reviews, loads of people saying things about them, and lots of "noise", "word-spreading" had been done. All have different issues why they are still around. All seem to have rather nice code, or had(have) very good code even. So? what made ALL the open feature patches still be around? And what made others slip in after one or two reviews? What made some features get in and break stuff, while others went trough tens of rehauls and are still "not perfect", or even more often, are orphaned because the maintainer gave up? Is that coïncidence? I think not. You can call it "teamwork", "hanging around on IRC", or "mailing reviewers personally" or anything else. I call that politics. And last, but absolutely certainly not least: I am *NOT* trying to say Dries is doing a bad job, not at all! I made sure to speak about "WE"! We, including me: I am to blame too, others might feel the same. I am not pretending that I know all the stuff better (I see a few particular problems, that I try to fix), and I am NOT telling Dries should do his job better. Please, no! I am (trying to, at least) saying that we, all of us who really want 4.7 to stabilise, should try to hold back our features, and put more efforts in "real" 4.7 stuff. And that those that want 4.7 to go out of the door, should try to hold back those that seem to care less about that and try to put some pressure on small features before 4.7, and thus delaying that release. Bèr