| Fortunately it doesn't for us. In our case, one of the things I want to do is run it as a fully legitimate open source project. In this case, we're going to be open and say when we can't work on something, or when we're unlikely to work on something, because we've got those 800+ contributors at or door asking for things. There's a lot of triage. In the past I've seen other projects take a few alternate routes - leave everyone hanging (unfair) or auto-merge everything (unstable). So that's kind of where we're at. We do recognize we don't have /limitless/ resources, but this is kind of what you get for having a project on GitHub with so many stars and forks. The user and testing community is absolutely awesome, but I when we say we aren't going to do something, it's because we want to be clear where we stand or have a conversation, or encourage people to contribute. As Spock said "the needs of the many, outweigh the needs of the few or the one". Triage! |