I plan to add some addition text in the roadmap with the overall objectives 
along with the issues as I think we've become opaque again regarding the 
deliverables. Maven is used so widely users just expect more information about 
what's coming.

On Nov 14, 2012, at 4:23 AM, Anders Hammar <and...@hammar.net> wrote:

> A very big +1 for 6-8 weeks release cycles for core!
> 
> /Anders
> 
> 
> On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 9:25 PM, Jason van Zyl <ja...@tesla.io> wrote:
> 
>> I have put together a simple roadmap using JIRA macros in Confluence to
>> try and communicate to users what we're planning to do.
>> 
>> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/MAVEN/Roadmap
>> 
>> There are several issues in the 3.1.0 list that are unassigned, so as a
>> matter of course if you want to work on it just assign it to yourself and
>> the stuff that isn't assigned should just get pulled out and pushed back to
>> the 3.1.x pool. For the folks who popped up to say they wanted to look at
>> particular issues I made the assignment. So take a look and if you do, or
>> don't, want to do something then change the assignment.
>> 
>> I picked a tentative date of November 26th for the 3.1.0 and I think we
>> just time box it, get done what we can and move on. I'd like to try and get
>> back to making core releases every 6 weeks, if at all possible.
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> 
>> Jason
>> 
>> ----------------------------------------------------------
>> Jason van Zyl
>> Founder & CTO, Sonatype
>> Founder,  Apache Maven
>> http://twitter.com/jvanzyl
>> ---------------------------------------------------------
>> 
>> There's no sense in being precise when you don't even know what you're
>> talking about.
>> 
>> -- John von Neumann
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 

Thanks,

Jason

----------------------------------------------------------
Jason van Zyl
Founder & CTO, Sonatype
Founder,  Apache Maven
http://twitter.com/jvanzyl
---------------------------------------------------------

happiness is like a butterfly: the more you chase it, the more it will
elude you, but if you turn your attention to other things, it will come
and sit softly on your shoulder ...

-- Thoreau 





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