Hi all,

I won't write here again what I have already written in previous mails and 
reports about my frustrations.

In this case the lack of a community is a big deal and it's sad to read about 
the retirement. Sad but understandable.

Even if I committed once a week, the project would keep being dead; I started 
again last week working on it, but honestly I'm not too keen working on one-man 
project. And it's not even funny. 

Sadly, as I cannot guarantee a regular involvement, I accept the decision of 
retiring the project.

Regards
Ale

On 26 Jun 2012, at 19:00, Kevan Miller <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> On Jun 26, 2012, at 12:47 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> 
>> I think the lack of response sort of speaks for itself. I will add my two 
>> cents however:
>> 
>> I know that some projects which haven't really built community have stayed 
>> in incubation status for quite a while.
>> 
>> I think if there is a chance that community can be built, and an 
>> organization begin actively contributing patches, then its worth waiting a 
>> little bit, but that's just my opinion.
> 
> Yes. And a long running project that I mentored just graduated. However, some 
> level of activity will be expected/required by the IPMC. 
> 
> I'd prefer to see the community grow and graduate. However, that does not 
> always happen. Incubation is not a forever process.
> 
> Unless activity picks up and community grows, we will need to consider 
> retirement.
> 
> --kevan

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