A bunch of people spend a dozen days together in July at the third Tails developers yearly summit. This was a great opportunity to have crazy hacking sessions in person, as well as to discuss where we are heading to and how.
We mainly discussed the **growth of the project**: given the growing number of users and our super-short release cycle, it is a challenge to keep the project sustainable and maintainable in the mid/long term.
We also **redesigned our communication channels** to ease involvement of new contributors, to make more workload sharing possible, and to be able to provide better user support. In short:
Our mailing lists see quite a lot of traffic these days.This might deter people from reading it. So, we will create two specialized mailing lists: a private, encrypted one will receive bug reports, while a public one will be dedicated to user support.
This summit gave us the chance to **evaluate and refine processes** that we have set up a year ago, such as our time-based release schedule and a formal merge policy.
To end with, the **public development meetings** experiment will be extended, and we will go on having monthly **Low Hanging Fruits sessions**. Not only these sessions are very useful to make Tails better, but we were happy to see new people join these parties recently. We hope to see even more of that in the future: these sessions are great times to **start contributing** to Tails!
Hours of meetings were certainly a necessary part of the summit, but we also dedicated a fair share of our time to hands-on activities.Fortunately there is quite a lot of room for improvements in Tails, so we were never left unoccupied.
We spent some time listing problems with early builds of **Tails based on Debian Wheezy**. It is now clearer to us what remains to do: [[!tails_ticket 6015 desc="a few dozens tickets"]] were created. Did we mention that any kind of help is warmly welcome? :)
A lot of branches were **merged for the upcoming 0.20 release**, including the installation of Dasher and a first step towards the replacement of TrueCrypt.
The **Pidgin and OTR documentation** was rewritten to be clearer and more precise, as well as our explanation of the way random nicknames are generated for Pidgin accounts.