Don't apologize volutar, you're standing up for the community
I, for one, fully agree!
I currently use a nightly from the fall (after 2 weapon tanks, before map scripts) that seems to do things pretty well for what I want. So should I label my mod as "Works in nightly 2014-10-22"?
You can't download anything older than the 31st of January (but for good ol' 1.0 of course) so there's absolutely no point on doing that. I might as well be the sole user of my mod and not publish it instead of requiring something 99% of users won't be able to find.
And would users go through the trouble of getting an old nightly instead of grabbing the most recent one and benefiting from its most recent developments (along with the mods that can manage to follow)? It is
harder to get an old nightly than the most recent one, after all...
If there were a 1.*, it would be easy to grab for users (the milestone is much easier to install than any nightly) and it would change much less frequently (so it would be easier to keep on top of things for modders).
Plus, encouraging the users to run the latests milestone would mean that developers get relatively reports of recent bug (the old ones having been purged from the milestone), instead of things that happen in 1.0. So it helps with the development as well, whereas 1.0 users don't really.
Seems like a Win/Win/Win scenario to me...
Did nobody notice this thread? https://openxcom.org/forum/index.php/topic,3287.0.html
Pick a commit that is stable, fork it, have the community crown it as 1.1. Cherry-pick some commits that fix relevant bugs if need be.
I just replied there (just got back to OpenXCom from a few months break). It indeed doesn't really have to be picked by the devs, but it should be released on the main website as 1.1 as well. There's no point in modders picking a nightly to use as 1.1 if regular users coming in still install 1.0 and the only nightly available for Windows only go back 2 weeks (and I have no idea how to pick for Mac or Linux..).
The next milestone, regardless of who picks it (devs or modders) has to be widely distributed so that users will use it instead of other version. The whole point of publishing mods is for people to use them. If only modders use the modders' milestone, then it's pointless.