> In the world of software development, maintenance mode refers to a point in a computer program's life when it has reached all of its goals and is generally considered to be "complete" and bug-free. The term can also refer to the point in a software product's evolution when it is no longer competitive with other products or current with regard to the technology environment it operates within.
> In the world of software development, maintenance mode refers to a point in a computer program's life when it has reached all of its goals and is generally considered to be "complete" and bug-free. The term can also refer to the point in a software product's evolution when it is no longer competitive with other products or current with regard to the technology environment it operates within.
- The [author](#credits) of this application is not actively developping any major new features (only small fixes)
- The [author](#credits) of this application is not actively developing any new major features (only small fixes)
- This software is not dead (yet)
- New releases are published regularly depending on the contributions made by the community
- New releases are published regularly depending on the contributions made by the community
- Pull requests for new features and bug fixes are accepted as long as the [guidelines](.github/pull_request_template.md) are followed
- Pull requests for new features and bug fixes are accepted as long as the [guidelines](.github/pull_request_template.md) are followed