+1 (binding)

On Mon, May 23, 2016 at 10:56 PM, Daniel Gruno <humbed...@apache.org> wrote:

> Since it seems the discussion has died down, I am now calling a vote on
> accepting Pony Mail into the Incubator. Sorry in advance for potato.
>
> This vote will run for the usual 72 hours.
>
> ################### PROPOSAL BELOW ###################
>
> Abstract
>
> Pony Mail is a mail-archiving, archive viewing, and interaction service,
> that can be integrated with many email platforms.
>
> Proposal
>
> Background
>
> Pony Mail began as a response to two things; the lack of diversity in
> mailing list archives that are less bureaucratic all-or-nothing and more
> fluid way to interact with mailing lists than what is typically offered,
> and the lack of a performant system that solves this issue. Modern users
> of software want to jump right into a discussion they see, but cannot
> normally do so in a mailing list driven environment because of the rules
> generally surrounding said environment. Pony Mail, along with a select
> handful of newer archive systems, provides an interface that allows
> people to just hop into a thread, and take part. Without the need to
> subscribe, download the mbox archive, load it into your MTA, and respond.
>
> As Rich writes in a very short essay:
>
> You see a thread in which someone is WRONG ON THE INTERNET! You need to
> correct them. How do you do this today? You kinda don't. If you really
> wanted, you could download mbox files (and who the hell knows where they
> are?) and then try to get them into your mail client (which never works)
> and then reply to it. Which will break threading, because you did
> something wrong. Then you tear out your hair. PONY MAIL TO THE RESCUE!!!
> (sound of hoof beats)
>
> Rationale
>
> One of the oft-heard complaints about Apache's development model is that
> mailing lists are an old person's tool, and web-based communication -
> forums - are the way to go in the 21st Century. Providing a
> full-featured forum-like interface to mailing lists is one goal,while
> keeping all of the enormous benefits that mailing lists already provide.
> Asecond goal is to provide the ability to "jump in" to a mailing list
> conversation - even one that was a while back, without the convolutions
> that a mailing list requires. That is, to join this conversation the old
> way, one would have had to subscribe to the mailing list, download an
> mbox, and import it into ones mail client, in order that I be able to
> reply to this message with correct threading. With Pony Mail, one has to
> do none of those things, but can simply reply using the Web UI. To us,
> this is a HUGE benefit for building community. The requirement to jump
> through hoops to join a mailing list conversation drives away a lot of
> people (at least, anecdotally, it does) and if we can remove that
> barrier I think we'll have an easier time of drawing a new generation
> into our projects.
>
> Initial Goals
>
> The initial goals of transitioning to the ASF is to expand and grow both
> the Pony codebase and community, and ensure the project's continued
> growth and stability through forming a diverse and reliable community,
> in which the various facets of developers and contributors help keep the
> project up to date with latest developments and technical as well as
> social needs.
>
> Current Status
>
>     Meritocracy:
>
> The bulk of the code has been written by Daniel Gruno to date, but has
> had oversight from other committers, and mentors.
>
>     All members of the Pony project and wider community have a deep
> understanding and appreciation for the ASF meritocracy ideals, and are
> almost solely current ASF Members.
>
>     Community:
>         The community is currently heavily focused within the ASF, and
> more specifically the Infrastructure group. This is to be expected given
> the nature of how the code came into existence in the first place. It
> should be noted that we have started reaching out to other groups who we
> know are using mailing list systems and therefore also rely on mailing
> list archive interfaces.
>
>     Core Developers:
>
> Almost all core developers are ASF members, and are already intimately
> familiar with the Apache Way.
>
>     Alignment:
>
> Pony will be very in line with ASF practices and processes as many of
> the founding members are long term ASF members and committers.
>
> Known Risks
>
>     Orphaned products:
>
> We are not aware of any issues with orphaned products related to this
> project.
>
>     Pony Mail relies on a set of CSS3 templates as well as some very stable
>         programming languages. We have no reason to believe these would
> be orphaned or, should they become orphaned, that it would impact the
> development of the project.
>
>     Inexperience with Open Source:
>         Most of the current committers are already ASF members and
> committers, we do not believe there to be any concerns around OSS
> inexperience.
>
>     Homogenous Developers:
>         While the current mix of people involved in the project spans
> several continents with a wide variety of skills and experience, a long
> standing relation with the ASF applies to all committers (even the
> non-ASF people in this proposal are intimately familiar with the ASF),
> and we believe there to be a very homogeneous culture in terms of
> development, IP and release processes.
>
>     Reliance on Salaried Developers:
>         While two of the committers in this project are salaried
> developers with regards to Pony, the project was founded outside of
> corporate interests, and is primarily driven by people either working
> for or with ties to non-profit
>
>         organisations.
>         We see no issues regarding possible strong-arming or otherwise
> skewing project focus, nor do we believe that absence of salaries would
> deter people from committing to this project.
>
>     Relationships with Other Apache Products:
>         Pony Mail uses at least Apache HTTPd with mod_lua as its
> end-user facing delivery mechanism. Many of the commiters are also
> involved with this PMC.
>
>         Pony also utilises ElasticSearch which is based on Lucene.
>
> Documentation
>
>     Documentation will initially be in the source tree, and be part of
> the initial code inclusion.
>
> Initial Source
>
>     The initial source was written under the Apache License v/2.0 from
> the beginning, and is available at:
>
>     https://github.com/Quenda/ponymail
>
> Source and Intellectual Property Submission Plan
>
>     We know of no legal encumberments in the way of transfer of source
> to Apache. Portions of the software (sans dependencies) is already owned
> by the ASF, other portions privately, but it will be granted to the ASF
> in its entirety.
>
> External Dependencies:
>
>     ElasticSearch backend (Apache License v/2.0)
>     Apache HTTP Server front-end with mod_lua loaded (Apache License
> v/2.0 for httpd, MIT for Lua)
>     Python 3.x for importing/archiving (PSF License)
>     Lua 5.1 or 5.2 + lua-cjson (MIT License, lua-cjson is optional)
>     Bootstrap/JQuery (MIT License)
>
> Cryptography Pony employs no cryptography other than what TLS-enabled
> web sites served by HTTPd might use.
>
> Required Resources:
>
>     Mailing lists:It would be rude not too, given this project should
> archive them.
>
>     Subversion Directory:Nope
>
>     Git Repositories:
>         - incubator-ponymail.git - incubator-ponymail-site.git
>
>     Issue Tracking: JIRA or GitHub Issues
>
>     Other Resources: Dev stack, PoC Stack, HipChat Channel
>
> Initial Committers
>
>     Daniel Gruno < humbed...@apache.org >
>
>     Tony Stevenson < pct...@apache.org >
>
>     Richard Bowen < rbo...@apache.org >
>
>     Ulises Beresi < ulises.cerv...@gmail.com >
>
>     David P Kendal < apa...@dpk.io >
>
>     Francesco Chicchiriccò - < ilgro...@apache.org >
>
>     Sam Ruby < ru...@apache.org >
>
>     Shane Curcuru < curc...@apache.org >
>
>     Jim Jagielski < j...@apache.org >
>
> Affiliations
>
>     Daniel Gruno - Quenda IvS
>     Tony Stevenson - pctony ltd, VocalIQ Ltd
>     Richard Bowen - Redhat, inc.
>     Ulises Beresi - Datastax, inc.
>     David P Kendal - Quenda IvS
>     Francesco Chicchiriccò - Tirasa S.r.l.
>     Sam Ruby - IBM
>     Shane Curcuru - IBM(?)
>     Jim Jagielski - Capital One
>
> Sponsors
>
>     Champion:
>
>         Suneel Marthi < smar...@apache.org >
>
>     Nominated Mentors:
>
>         Andrew Bayer < aba...@apache.org >
>
>         John D. Ament < johndam...@apache.org >
>
>     Sponsoring Entity:
>         The Apache Software Foundation
>
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>


-- 
Best regards,

   - Andy

Problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back. - Piet Hein
(via Tom White)

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