Jesse, All that will be required in the new year is one of
Option 1: review the jira to see if there is somebody you can pass the project off to (and call a vote to add them as a committer if necessary) if you cannot find somebody to pass the project off to, then you follow option 2 Option 2. Just call a vote to retire the project Option 3. Send a mail to users looking for somebody to pass the project off to, if somebody steps up, call a vote to add them as a committer (if necessary) and if nobody, follow option 2. With none of the above are you responsible for applying any patches, or making any releases at all... just calling the votes w.r.t. the plugin and perhaps reviewing the current issues in JIRA to see if there is somebody to pass things off to.... unless that is you actually did want to take over the project ;-) Personally I'm not that interested in the rmic plugin I got from /dev/urandom, but I decided that I was not going to repeat the process until I got one I liked as that would not be fair! On 21 December 2011 14:15, Jesse Farinacci <[email protected]> wrote: > Greetings, > > On Wed, Dec 21, 2011 at 6:13 AM, <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> By random seed, you have been designated as responsble for deciding the >> fate of the above project at mojo.codehaus.org >> http://markmail.org/thread/4x3mqscofo7qps4g > > > I am generally very happy that you're doing the Mojo Call to Arms. > Unfortunately /dev/urandom was not kind to me.. JSPC is interesting, but I > find that the maven plugin is actually written in Groovy. I am not > interested in Groovy.. and, looking through the mojo, I really can not see > any advantage at all to using it. > > Maybe I can trade with someone interested in using Groovy? > > -Jesse > > -- > There are 10 types of people in this world, those > that can read binary and those that can not. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, please visit: http://xircles.codehaus.org/manage_email
