> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gavin M. Roy [mailto:gmr@ehpg.net]
> Sent: 16 March 2004 20:09
> To: pgsql-www@postgresql.org
> Subject: [pgsql-www] Website Roundup
>
> I've been fairly quietly watching the events of the pgsql-www
> list, those in the "website team" and those outside of the
> "team". There are many opinions, many cooks in the kitchen,
> and little overall progress.
> As peoples time commitments and abilities vary, what I
> believe needs to happen, as I've heard others state as well,
> is we need to have someone step-up and manage the process of
> getting the series of sites to completion. I'd be happy to
> take up that role if you all agree to it, or we need to find
> someone with the time and dedication to make it happen.
> Alexey and others have come very far, but not far enough, and
> from my perspective there is no end in site, as there appears
> to not be any focused group or manager holding the reigns and
> coordinating development, testing, and implementation.
Hi Gavin,
Currently my time is constrained by family issues and my studies, hence
most of what I do is the 'background' stuff that probably only gets seen
by Marc & Robert, as well as odd bits and pieces here and there.
Consequently I am happy for someone to drive the continuing development
of the sites - provided the existing basic plan is followed. This is
basically:
Phase 1: Make the current portal capable of supporting multiple
languages, and remain mirrorable.
Phase 2: Design an new look/feel for the portal that can be extended
across other sites. They need not look identical, but should appear to
have come froom the same stable as it were.
Phase 3: Re-assess the different sites and merge them as appropriate.
Apply new designs/styles to remaining sub-sites to brig them into line
with the portal.
My personal opinion is that the major problem is finding the required
developer time rather than management - both Andreas and Alexey have
made good progress, but both also have other commitments requiring their
time. Still, I do see the value of a formal plan, and if you can come up
with that it would certainly help - even if just to breakup the work
into bitesized chunks that are more likely to get done 'in a spare 5
minutes'.
Regards, Dave.