I'm a fullstack developer, author and inventor. Sometimes a photographer and designer of my logos and UIs/UXs.
Mostly I'm working with JS and Web itself.
I wish I could extra-like a comment - that's the sort of proactivity required. I have no experience with npm governance - what does the proposal process look like after this point?
I'm a fullstack developer, author and inventor. Sometimes a photographer and designer of my logos and UIs/UXs.
Mostly I'm working with JS and Web itself.
It was the first time I participated to NPM community, so maybe I'm missing something. But in short words idea section, where my proposals published, is for discussion and voting for some raw ideas. And as I've just figured out I needed to promote mine better. Well this section is for discussion only and has no restrictions or requirements.
Also you can create an RFC, which requires more strict form, and then make a PR to npm/rfcs itself. Its' README describes the process in details. RFC will be reviewed by NPM contributors and it seems a better approach to make things done.
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We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
I think this is not controversial decision it's an adware. And community should fight back such practices.
I made two proposals to NPM to prevent such behavior and to enhance UX for developers who want to monetize their work:
It's better to protect against such things in the future.
I wish I could extra-like a comment - that's the sort of proactivity required. I have no experience with npm governance - what does the proposal process look like after this point?
It was the first time I participated to NPM community, so maybe I'm missing something. But in short words idea section, where my proposals published, is for discussion and voting for some raw ideas. And as I've just figured out I needed to promote mine better. Well this section is for discussion only and has no restrictions or requirements.
Also you can create an RFC, which requires more strict form, and then make a PR to npm/rfcs itself. Its' README describes the process in details. RFC will be reviewed by NPM contributors and it seems a better approach to make things done.