I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
Fippo, thanks for all the great work you've done so far for Jitsi Meet and all your precious advices and help!
Cheers,
Yana
···
On 29 Aug 2014, at 16:38, Emil Ivov <emcho@jitsi.org> wrote:
Hello all,
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
On Aug 29, 2014, at 5:38 PM, Emil Ivov <emcho@jitsi.org> wrote:
Hello all,
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
On Fri, Aug 29, 2014 at 5:38 PM, Emil Ivov <emcho@jitsi.org> wrote:
Hello all,
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka Philipp
Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could
connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's how
Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is
high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most
knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the
XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with XMPP
and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling this
vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka
Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that
could connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences.
That's how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it
is high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the
most knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving
on the XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience
with XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am
calling this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka
Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could
connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's
how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is
high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most
knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the
XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with
XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling
this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka
Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could
connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's
how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is
high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most
knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the
XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with
XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling
this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.
And we are now ready to close this vote and add one more valuable member to the team:
Vote summary:
+1 Accept Fippo as a committer: Hristo Terezov, Yana Stamcheva, Emil Ivov, Paweł Domas, Yasen Pramatarov, Damian Minkov, Lyubomir Marinov, Ingo Bauersachs, Mr. Smith, Sebastien Vincent, Boris Grozev, Danny van Heumen
0 Does not matter to me: 0
-1 Reject Fippo as a committer: 0
Congratulations Fippo! You are now officially part of the Jitsi dev team
and we are super happy to have you among us!
Emil
···
On 29.08.14, 17:38, Emil Ivov wrote:
Hello all,
I would like to call a vote for granting commit rights to Fippo (aka
Philipp Hancke)
Last November (2013) Fippo wrote the first WebRTC JavaScript that could
connect to Jitsi Videobridge and use it for WebRTC conferences. That's
how Jitsi Meet was born.
Ever since Fippo has continued steadily contributing and I believe it is
high time he became an official member of our community
Some more info about him:
Fippo currently lives in Germany, works for &yet and is one of the most
knowledgeable WebRTC expects I know. He is also currently serving on the
XMPP Software Foundation Council and has a very long experience with
XMPP and RTC. Need I say more?
So therefore, according to the procedure described in [0], I am calling
this vote on granting him commit access on our GitHub repository.
Please vote on the following:
[ ] +1 Accept Fippo as a committer.
[ ] 0 Does not matter to me.
[ ] -1 Reject Fippo as a committer.
Note: Votes from non-developers (non-binding votes) are encouraged since
they show the general opinion of the Jitsi community.