I would like to announce my candidacy for Horizon PTL for Mitaka. I've been contributing to Horizon since the Grizzly cycle and I've had the honor of serving as PTL for the past four cycles. Over the past couple of releases, our main goal has been to position Horizon for the future while maintaining a stable, extensible project for current installations and providing a smooth path forward for those installations. Which is proving a delicate balancing act. In Kilo, we added a great deal of toolkit for AngularJS based content and took a first pass at some AngularJS driven content in Horizon. Much of the Liberty cycle was spent applying the lessons we learned from the Kilo work and correcting architectural issues. While the amount of AngularJS based content is not growing quickly in Horizon, we have created a framework that plugins are building on. We've had several successes in the Liberty cycle. We have a more complete plugin framework to allow for an increasing number of projects in the big tent to create Horizon content. The plugin framework works for both Django based and AngularJS based plugins. Theming improvements have continued and is now far more powerful. Many improvements in the AngularJS tooling. Including: sensible localization support for AngularJS code; a more coherent foundation for JavaScript code; better testing support; and an implemented JS coding style. Areas of focus for the Mitaka cycle: Stability. Continue to balance progress and stability. Finding a better way to allow forward progress on AngularJS content inside of Horizon. I've been advocating the use of feature branches for some time and will look to push work there to help establish the patterns for Angular in Horizon. Continue progress in moving separable content out of the Horizon source tree. This will benefit both service teams to make faster progress, while reducing the overall scope of the Horizon project. Focus work on areas of high benefit. There are a several reasons we chose to adopt AngularJS. Most were around scaling, usability and access to data. Let's focus on the areas with the greatest upside first. Provide better guidance for plugins in the form of testing and style guidelines. I'm still driven to continue the challenging work the Horizon community has undertaken to improve and look forward. If you'll have me, I'd like to continue enabling the talented folks doing the heavy lifting while balancing the needs of existing users. I believe if we continue to work through some of these transitional pains, we'll make significant progress in Mitaka. Thanks for your consideration, David Lyle