Difference between revisions of "How do I vote for issues in the Public Issue Tracker?"

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You can vote for new features and bugs that you wish to see resolved, and [https://jira.secondlife.com/secure/IssueNavigator.jspa?mode=hide&requestId=10071 view all issues by # of votes]. JIRA uses [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Approval_voting approval voting], so you can vote for as many (or few) issues as you'd like, and you get 1 vote per issue.
 
You can vote for new features and bugs that you wish to see resolved, and view all issues by # of votes. JIRA uses approval voting, so you can vote for as many (or few) issues as you'd like, and you get 1 vote per issue.
 


Votes can readily be used as part of our prioritization process. Note that since we need to look at aspects such as feasibility and the time required for implementation, a highly-voted issue isn't necessarily going to be resolved ahead of lesser-voted, but more easily resolved issues.
Votes can readily be used as part of our prioritization process. Note that since we need to look at aspects such as feasibility and the time required for implementation, a highly-voted issue isn't necessarily going to be resolved ahead of lesser-voted, but more easily resolved issues.

Revision as of 13:03, 5 October 2009

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This article is part of the Extended Second Life Knowledge Base that includes advanced and specialized information. This information was originally provided by Linden Lab, but is not actively maintained nor guaranteed to be accurate. Linden Lab does not certify nor assume any responsibility for this information.

See the official Second Life Knowledge Base for the most current information.

You can vote for new features and bugs that you wish to see resolved, and view all issues by # of votes. JIRA uses approval voting, so you can vote for as many (or few) issues as you'd like, and you get 1 vote per issue.

Votes can readily be used as part of our prioritization process. Note that since we need to look at aspects such as feasibility and the time required for implementation, a highly-voted issue isn't necessarily going to be resolved ahead of lesser-voted, but more easily resolved issues.