Apologies for any typos, somewhat jet-lagged atm.

On 9/16/22 3:15 AM, Anthony Towns via bitcoin-dev wrote:
Subhead: "Nobody expects a Bitcoin Inquistion? C'mon man, *everyone*
expects a Bitcoin Inquisition."

As we've seen from the attempt at a CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY activation earlier
in the year [0], the question of "how to successfully get soft fork
ideas from concept to deployment" doesn't really have a good answer today.

I strongly disagree with this. Going back many, many years we've had many discussions about fork process, and the parts people (historically) agreed with tend to be:

(1) come up with an idea
(2) socialize the idea in the technical community, see if anyone comes up with any major issues or can suggest better ideas which solve the same use-cases in cleaner ways (3) propose the concrete idea with a more well-defined strawman, socialize that, get some kind of rough consensus in the loosely-defined, subjective, "technical community" (ie just ask people and adapt to feedback until you have found some kind of average of the opinions of people you, the fork-champion, think are reasonably well-informed!).
(4) okay, admittedly beyond this is a bit less defined, but we can deal with it 
when we get there.

Turns out, the issue today is a lack of champions following steps 1-3, we can debate what the correct answer is to step (4) once we actually have people who want to be champions who are willing to (humbly) push an idea forward towards rough agreement of the world of technical bitcoiners (without which I highly doubt you'd ever see broader-community consensus).

Matt
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