Yuri Baburov wrote:
> Do you need more committers/triagers?

Yes, always.  This has been discussed, and we will promote those who deserve
it.  For those wanting to know how to become committers or triagers, well, I
can tell you how I did it:
 1. Spend lots of time using Django.
 2. Take part in mailing list discussions.
 3. Be active in the ticket system.
 4. Go to PyCon to meet with the core devs.
 5. Submit many quality patches.
 6. Repeat.

> Reasons for:
> * Opened tickets count is increasing faster then decreasing.

Can't argue with you there.  The sprint helped quite a bit though.  When's the
next one Adrian?

> * Community is growing and expanding fast.

True, and probably one reason for the first bullet.

> * Simple bugs are not fixed.

Well, we do have to take things in balance.  If we spend all our time on the
simple bugs, then the hard bugs don't get fixed.  On the other hand, if we
spend all our time on the hard bugs, the simple ones don't get fixed.  I would
say we keep a pretty good balance.

> * Tickets remains opened for months.
> * Ticket code become outdated after some number of commits.

I suggest using some sort of version control system that supports easy
branching and easy merging.  I have tons of branches that I manage this way:
http://gdub.wordpress.com/2007/01/11/hacking-django-how-bazaar/
Keeping my patches up to date has been a breeze ever since.

Gary

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