I have been following Hector almost from the early stages of its development and found the project very promising. At one point, I was planning to integrate it into my own infrastructure and base part of my stack around it.
I noticed that the repository was later removed from public access for refactoring/rework, which is completely understandable. However, since then it has been difficult to understand the current status of the project and its future direction.
I would really appreciate it if you could share some insight on the following points (to the extent you are comfortable doing so):
- What is the current state of the project?
- Is active development ongoing, paused, or planned to resume at a later time?
- Do you have a rough roadmap or vision for the next stages (even at a high level)?
- Are there any approximate timelines you have in mind?
- Do you see Hector as a long-term maintained project, or more as an experimental / research-driven effort?
The reason I’m asking is purely practical: for infrastructure planning it is important to understand whether and how the project may evolve, and whether it makes sense to plan future integration around it.
Thank you for the work you’ve already put into Hector — even in its earlier public form, it was clear that a lot of thought and engineering effort went into it.
I have been following Hector almost from the early stages of its development and found the project very promising. At one point, I was planning to integrate it into my own infrastructure and base part of my stack around it.
I noticed that the repository was later removed from public access for refactoring/rework, which is completely understandable. However, since then it has been difficult to understand the current status of the project and its future direction.
I would really appreciate it if you could share some insight on the following points (to the extent you are comfortable doing so):
The reason I’m asking is purely practical: for infrastructure planning it is important to understand whether and how the project may evolve, and whether it makes sense to plan future integration around it.
Thank you for the work you’ve already put into Hector — even in its earlier public form, it was clear that a lot of thought and engineering effort went into it.