If we suggest projects to be posted on github/etc, that would prevent dying links.
Down the road maybe viewer's votes would simplify who to choose for the month. I'm thinking simplicity is better here. ( facebook and greenlight only have an upvote, no downvotes ). We could could pick by recent-popular activity. -- Jake On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 7:27 AM, Jason Marshall <j...@yahoo.com> wrote: > There are a lot of old projects on pygame.org with dead links. This isn't > newbie friendly. To counter this, I boldly propose the following: > > Deletion of old projects if the user is inactive and the links are dead. > Enshrinement of the really good old projects into a pygame Hall of Fame. > Proposed details: > > The pgHoF project must be really good. We'll need volunteers to nominate > projects and vote for a winner. > The pgHoF project must use pygame or a derivative of it. > The pgHoF project must have freely-available source code. > The pgHoF project must be >= 1 year old. > To make it elite, only 1 pygame application can be added per quarter > (January-March, April-June, July-September, October-December). > If necessary, the pgHoF application will be modified to run on pygame 1.9.2. > Installation will be simpler than installing Python, especially on Windows. > > > What do you think? > Jason -- Jake