considering that:
- happybase is quite a mature and stable library
- happybase is widely used
- happybase has not seen much development lately
- the original author (me, @wbolster) is not very active as a maintainer anymore
- various pull requests and bug reports have not received proper attention
- @aiudirog has recently done fantastic work on making an async version of happybase: aiohappybase
- the same
aiohappybase work modernizes the code to be python3.6+ only
- the EOL dates of python2 and python3.5 are in the near future
it may be good for happybase's future if:
thoughts welcome, especially from @aiudirog (with whom i also have had recent email contact).