I'm also head of Vienna.pm [pm.org], maintainer of the CPANTS [perl.org] project, member of the TPF Grants Commitee [perl.org] and the YAPC Europe Foundation [yapceurope.org].
I've got stuff on CPAN [cpan.org], held various talks [domm.plix.at] and organised YAPC::Europe 2007 in Vienna [yapceurope.org].
So starting next week, Jonathan will work on Rakudo one full day a week (minimum of 8 hours of work), post about the work on the rakudo.org blog / use.perl.org. He will recieve € 150 per day spend working on Rakudo. We estimate that on average he will work 4 days per month. We agreed on funding three months (~ €1,800) and evalute the grant after that time. If everybody is happy, we will continue the grant until the end of 2008, where we will evaluate again (and check if we still have money left).
More info available in the WoC Wiki
After lunch. (Score:1)
But with this, and if Google SoC will deliver, it looks like we can have Perl 6 before Christmas after all**!
* Or when it's time for pensioning, whichever comes first.
** But still after lunch.
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Perhaps a bit of cynicism over the state of Perl 6 is mixed in, now after some 10 years since the process started, but I'm impressed with the latest development. A lot of good news coming out now in a still faster rate.
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I was just sure that I had a conversation at that time that discussed if Perl 6 would be ready in 2002.
Perhaps I have to move that conversation forward two years.
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However, it's also important to realize the reason that things are moving at the rate they are now. It's not because something magic has just happened. It's because the years up to now have been spent working on the language specification and honing it so there's a good language to implement, and build
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... and (to expand on Jonathan's very accurate comments) there's plenty of unsexy, invisible work remaining.
Yay (Score:1)
Great idea! (Score:1)