On Wed, May 04, 2016 at 03:02:24PM +0200, Tavmjong Bah wrote:
On Tue, 2016-05-03 at 12:34 -0700, Bryce Harrington wrote:
This will be a good opportunity to debrief from the hackfest and identify followup actions that the board should work on in coming months.
I'm almost done with collecting receipts from the hackfest and LGM. We spent roughly $7200 (plus or minus a few hundred dollars) out of the $13100 budgeted.
This hackfest was very successful in my opinion. Part of the reason it was so successful was having (somewhat accidentally) critical masses to work on the CMake build as well as GTK3 problems. I think we could duplicate this success by having some focused hacking sessions. In particular, I think it would be quite beneficial to have a gathering focused on getting 0.92 out. A follow up gathering could focus in fixing GTK 3 issues. Both these topics should be exciting to our user community which would help with raising funds to cover their costs.
Excellent ideas all around.
With releases traditionally the work falls into these categories:
0. Getting tests to all pass and the build to build cleanly 1. The actual release mechanics (make dist, signing, etc.) 2. Translation 3. Fixing release-critical bugs 4. PR/announcement 5. Website/infrastructure related bits and pieces
Some of these may be better suited to co-location than others. #0 I suspect is probably already in the bag, and #1 I've been working on behind the scenes so am not worried there. Translation I think kind of by definition is going to be hard to do as a hackfest. The PR and Website stuff probably would benefit from a hackfest but they're not areas likely to be blockers for us, although a strong case could be made from a fundraising perspective that it would be time well invested.
I suspect for this release bugfixing is the biggest remaining hurdle, but I don't have anywhere close to a handle on what it's going to look like so who knows. If we knew what bugs needed fixed the worst, and who the fixers would be, that would tell us the suitability of a hackfest and clue us in on where geographically it should be held.
I'm guessing that there's enough of us typically involved in releases that are located in the western half of the US, that a west-coast or midwest location might be sensible, and might be a fair turn since we've had hackfests on the east coast and England.
Bryce