Dear Tomas, On Thursday 15 April 2010, 14:24:54 Tomas M wrote: > Hello all aufs users, > this is Tomas M, the author of Slax and Linux Live scripts. > > I am using AUFS in my open source projects and I need AUFS to > be developed as long as possible. At the same time I realize that > it is very hard task to keep the code up to date with recent Kernel > changes. > > So I decided to do something to help aufs stay in business: > When you donate to AUFS, I will double your donation from my pocket. > Read more here: http://www.slax.org/aufs.php > > Yes you see it right. For every dollar you donate, I'm putting another > dollar > from my own money to support AUFS and it's developer Junjiro Okajima, > up to $2000 per month. This is it. This is the best time to donate, > right now.
Words can't express my feelings about your fundraising campaign for Junjiro. It's plain unbelievable. Gorgeous. Admirable. Magnificent. You rock. Thank you. I never felt better for spending a donation before. Junjiro is doing a great job for such a long time now, he really deserves it. > Everybody who can't donate himself, please at least spread this message > everywhere you can. Thank you. BTW, nobody is stopping YOU for doing both ;-) > Thank you Junjiro for AUFS! AUFS: No other project changed my usage pattern of Linux that drastically to the GOOD than this. It's a real pity, that certain forces from the Linux headquarter are such boneheads, when it comes to filesystem layering! :-( Obviously, in the twisted mazes of VFS, they loose track of the real forces, that filesystem unification constitutes to their users, an most users don't know either. I do use aufs to solve real world problems, that are hard or impossible to solve otherwise, but even I only scratch on the surface of the potentials of this technology in general. What a pity. > Tomas M > www.slax.org All forces to _both_ of you, Pete ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev