Peter Saint Andre for Council 2005

History
I've been involved with the Jabber community since late 1999. I've been the JEP Editor since the JSF was founded in 2001 and the JSF's Executive Director since 2002.

Contributions
Since I'm not a great coder, my original contributions to the Jabber community were HOWTOs (e.g., for jabberd 1.4 and Winjab). Since 2001 I've mostly focused on documenting existing protocols and writing new protocol specs. As a result I edited the XMPP RFCs and have also written dozens of JEPs. I've also kept the JEP process humming since 2001 as JEP Editor.

Fourth Council Accomplishments
Until 2004 I was not a member of the Jabber Council because, well, power corrupts -- I didn't want to have the power of the JEP Editor, Executive Director, and Council Chair (see my Council 2004 page). However, in 2004 I ran for Council, was elected by the membership of the JSF, and was selected as Chair by the fourth Council. My goal was to "crack the whip" and get lots of protocols finished. I think the fourth Council has been quite productive (see the vote tallies page), especially after the winter holidays, when past Councils have usually stopped working.

Fifth Council Priorities
My two disappointments with the fourth Council are that (1) we have not yet figured out a way to replace vcard-temp and (2) we have not yet settled on a really good protocol for end-to-end encryption. I've been working on these problems in the last few months by publishing JEP-0154 and modifying JEP-0116, but we don't have solutions yet. I think those two areas need to be our main priorities for the fifth Council.

Naturally we also have some work to do on finishing up some existing protocols (avatars, roster item exchange, SOAP over XMPP, etc.), but most of those are close to completion. I'd also like to see us develop a stable protocol for shared roster groups (building on JEP-0144), but I think that will be fairly easy compared to vCard++ and e2e encryption.

Why I'm Running Again
It's important that the Council stay productive. That doesn't necessarily mean publishing a lot of JEPs -- code is more important than protocol -- but it does mean publishing the right JEPs and trying to push them through the JSF standards process as quickly as we can. I'm running for Council again because I think I've done a good job of pushing the Council in 2004-2005, and I can do that again for 2005-2006.