It's not necessary to move to GitHub if nobody wants.
My main point is that there is almost zero community here 
and it's unlikely to change. If Brent or Raymond want to apply
a fix or so in the future, they could go to GitHub.

-- 
  Christian Grobmeier
  [email protected]

On Wed, Oct 8, 2014, at 16:39, Ross Gardler (MS OPEN TECH) wrote:
> How does it going to GitHub help?
> 
> Sent from my Windows Phone
> ________________________________
> From: Raymond Camden<mailto:[email protected]>
> Sent: ‎10/‎8/‎2014 7:26 AM
> To:
> [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: Ripple retirement? (Re: Incubator PMC/Board report for Oct
> 2014 ([ppmc]))
> 
> As much as I like Ripple, I know I don't have a lot of time to devote to
> it. I'd be fine with it going to GitHub.
> 
> 
> On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 3:46 AM, Christian Grobmeier <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> 
> > Hello all,
> >
> > we need to report soon, and I have made a few observations.
> >
> > We are actually not active in any kind. This is very sad, because most
> > of us here
> > want Ripple to survive, but it's the truth.
> >
> > We don't have commit activity. Only two of us where discussing a new
> > committer
> > to join, without managing to finally start the vote (reminder: this is a
> > dev list, new
> > committers are discussed on the private list).
> > Usually I have to push the report further to the Ripple lists and its
> > hard to get a report
> > done any time.
> >
> > I was wondering if we have a serious chance to change this.
> >
> > Yes, we discussed to join Cordova as subproject. But it won't help if
> > there are no
> > volunteers from that place taking over.
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> ===========================================================================
> Raymond Camden, Web Developer for Adobe
> 
> Email : [email protected]
> Blog : www.raymondcamden.com<http://www.raymondcamden.com>
> Twitter: raymondcamden

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