On Monday 01 May 2006 18:25, Darrel O'Pry wrote:
On Mon, 2006-05-01 at 10:51 -0400, Jenny Hsueh wrote:
Dries Buytaert wrote:
I'm very sceptic about roadmaps and long-term planning in the context of Drupal development. A roadmap is vaporware and creates pressure.
I respectfully disagree on this, commenting from an end user perspective. A roadmap is not about time boxing what is going to be developed when, but a shared common vision of the community how to get from point A to point B -- i.e. to understand the target and to understand the inter-dependencies. I feel this is essential for volunteer based project, although it is true that what is being coded is what gets delivered but without a roadmap how would you get feedback from end users on what is important ? From what I can gather on this mailing list discussions, which I only joined about a month ago, it looks like there are some very important and nifty features in drupal have not had adequate resource to work on . The question is how many people other than the current development community aware of this? A roadmap can be a very effective marketing tool to share your vision with a larger community, it does not need to be time boxed.
Cheers, jenny
From a developers perspective...
I'm going to develop what I want for Drupal regardless of the Roadmap other people have. I don't want my pet 'features' that are ready for release to have to wait on your pet feature. I want to see it in the mainline development version so people can test and comment on it. I think people who are actively developing drupal now days have a feel for where it is going.
.darrel.
Well, only kinda. For instance, is CCK ready for prime time yet? Should I be doing my nodes that way from now on? I keep hearing that CCK+Views is The Future(tm), but the last docs and discussion I saw on CCK say that it's still in a state of flux and not yet stable. Knowing something like "4.8 will include a stable CCK, so you can plan accordingly" (or not) is valuable, and not at all obvious to many of we peon developers. :-) -- Larry Garfield AIM: LOLG42 larry@garfieldtech.com ICQ: 6817012 "If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it." -- Thomas Jefferson