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I've gotten much mail about this, so I thought I'd just respond to it all at once. First off, I'd like to appologize for the misunderstanding about the date. When I said "it would be frozen on Monday", I meant that the freeze would be done by Monday. Apparently many people thought I meant the freeze would _start_ on Monday (which I can understand). Next time I'll be more clear. Because of this, there was a small window where uploads were made expecting to make it into Hamm before the freeze. If your package did not make it, then the easiest thing to do is to reupload it to Incoming with a distribution of "frozen unstable" on the first line of the "changelog" file. Also be sure the changelog states very clearly what has changed. I'll be trying to limit changes in Hamm to bug-fixes only. All critical, grave, and important bugs _must_ be marked as done before a packages will be allowed into Hamm. In addition, the criteria for admission into Hamm will become stricter as the freeze cycle goes on. After 2-3 weeks on serious bug fixes will be allowed. This is to prevent a large number of package fixes to be uploaded at the last minutes, thus swamping the testing group right before release. Some people think the removal from Hamm was a bad idea, some people think it was a good idea. It is my feeling that this "blinding flash of pain" is much better than a "long and drawn out process". The removal has been announced weekly for at least the last 4 weeks, so everybody should have known what was about to happen. I made a mistake and removed the following packages: quota xlib6 elvis These should be part of the distribution. Since a new upload would have been necessary anyway (to fix the outstanding bugs), this really is not a big problem. It merely means that I must keep track of these packages manually to make sure an upload is done before release. The "elvis" package was removed because there are still other versions of "vi" available". The "ksmbfs" was removed because it was (as I understand it) superceeded by another package. There were numerous packages removed because of "lintian" bugs (eg, no copyright file, etc.). While the bugs may not seem important, they really are trivial to fix and so a priority of "important" was agreed upon. While it's true that these bugs were not actually filed until recently, they were annouced publicly many weeks ago. If you have any further questions, please send me email. Brian ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] ) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Debian GNU/Linux! Search it at http://insite.verisim.com/search/debian/simple -- E-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST. Trouble? E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]