| Gord, thanks for the comments. Very much appreciated. Here are some of my thoughts... > "Give the team autonomy / ie. a virtual startup within Yahoo. Maybe split off a team or an Open Source startup ?" Everyone involved with the project, from upper management on down, are all engineers, and by having Yahoo entirely fund the YUI project it allows each of us to focus on nothing but building things for our community. If we were spun off, then we have to worry about making money, and well... I'd rather be coding. Even as a spin-off, if Yahoo (and others?) funded us 100%, I don't think much would change compared to how we currently operate. In my opinion, Yahoo is the best customer (and parent) a JavaScript library could ask for. > "Demand all Yahoo use latest YUI by religious edict from on high" When you hear the execs publicly talk about replacing old infrastructure components, upgrading everyone from YUI2 to YUI3 was one of those things we've been working on heavily. Flickr, Mail, and the Homepage are all on YUI 3.3.0+. By the end of 2011, all Y! Media properties will be on a recent version as well. That means the vast majority of the 80+ billion pageviews/month will be using a current YUI3 release. Maybe not bleeding edge, but close enough. YUI2 is deprecated and will only be receiving security fixes, if any ever arise. > "Consider mobile?" It's very much on our minds. It currently works great in mobile because of the efficient codebase, modular architecture, and the combohandler, but we're working on filling in some of the missing pieces. Stay tuned. > "One Unified example, or a framework / app-designer as the canonical YUI demo" We had a long-discussion about that very topic today. Now that we're on a new, self-hosted website, it opens up many possibilities for what we can do to really show off the library. |