Time is short and I'm still looking for answers to some questions about cPython, so that it makes a good showing in the Forrester survey. 1) How is the project governed? How does the community make decisions on what goes into a release? You know, I've been a member of the Python community for many years -- I know about PEPs, Guido as BDFL, and +1/-1. But I've never figured out exactly how -final- decisions are made on what goes into a release. I've never needed to, until now. Can someone explain in one paragraph? 2) Does the language have a formal defined release plan? I know Zope 3's release plan, every six months, but not that of Python. Is there a requirement to push a release out the door every N months, as some projects do, or is each release separately negotiated with developers around a planned set of features? 3) Some crude idea of how many new major and minor features were added in the last release? Yes, I know this is difficult -- the idea it so get some measure of the evolution/stability of cPython re features. Jython and IronPython are probably changing rapidly -- cPython, not such much. 4) How many committers to the cPython core are there? I don't have the necessary access to the pydotorg infrastructure to answer this -- can someone who does help me out here? Thanks for any one-line answers you can dash off to me today. Jeff Rush Python Advocacy Coordinator