I know it isn't actually urgent just yet (given we apparently still have another 2 years with ado managing things), but despite all the discussion, and noise, we have still have absolutely zero volunteers for someone to be the one who will take over from ado when he eventually decides to step down. Don't be shy, feel free to suggest yourself for the position... As I see it, the characteristics that we're looking for are ... 1) someone likely to be able to continue in the position for 10 years or so (beyond 2012) at least - so that probably puts an upper age limit of around 50 or so (today) unless you're planning on continuing to do this after retirement 2) someone patient, and not flustered - and who can handle (some) abuse without running away or responding - that is, with the ability to calmly listen to what people say, and then ignore most of it, extracting just the important points. 3) someone who uses the net most of the time, and typically has it available 365 days a year (366 in leap years) - so that urgent changes can get made without too much delay (the occasional day off is OK, and we can arrange a deputy for vacations, but you cannot be so busy that you have no time for processing anything.) Note two things I have deliberately omitted from that list - you don't really need to know much about timezones, of the tz library functions, or C coding, or ... there are plenty of people who can, and will, supply the initial information, and then review that provided by others. Knowledge can't hurt, but isn't essential. And second, no mention of network connectivity, server availability to make the distribution available, or anything like that - finding the person is the hard part, once that is done, if it is needed (or becomes needed later) we will find the server support needed for the mailing list, data distribution, etc, that stuff is all easy. If anyone has anything else that should be added to the job description, feel free... kre ps: on umbrella organisations (which we don't really need, and certainly not right now) one issue to take notice of is ownership of the data (the collection, rather than individual facts). I know the IETF would want to blast ISOC copyright notices on everything (access would still be free, but everything they do gets copyrighted by them). I have no idea what the unicode consortium's position would be, but I wouldn't be surprised to see something similar. Currently the data files are all copyright free, licence free, just available - I'd personally prefer to keep it that way.