As many changes have already been completed, the project is
progressively moving toward a new “ready to release” phase, with
a growing number of downstream fixes already consolidated
upstream, even if the work is not fully completed yet. It may
be better to iterate additional fixes in future releases instead
of trying to consolidate everything at once.
This first release will also impact Roland and Mark as Debian
and FreeBSD maintainers, so it should happen when they feel
ready, as they will also need to prepare and publish
updated versions on their side.
Keeping the current focus on reducing historical technical
debt and reintegrating long-standing downstream work upstream
still appears to be the correct priority for now.
3. That said, there are still some weak points:
- documentation is still fragmented between
SourceForge, mailing lists, distro patches, wiki pages, and
GitHub discussions,
- the maintainer pool is still relatively small,
which can slow reviews and create some continuity risk,
- and the project still lacks a clearly centralized
long-term roadmap defining modernization priorities and release
direction.
Overall though, the direction feels healthy, pragmatic, and
technically credible.
4. It would be very interesting to hear what you think as
well:
- What could still be improved?
- What is currently missing?
- How could more people become involved?
- And what should the priorities be for the next
phases of the project?
Bruno