I'd like to make it easier to those interested in Bloodhound to get involved. Specifically I would like to add opt-in checkboxes for people to sign up to dev@ or user@ at the point of registering and account on i.a.o/bloodhound[1].
This should be possible through us sending a request to be added on their behalf using the "Subscribe alternate address" mechanism[2]: dev-subscribe-*username=host.tld*@bloodhound.apache.org Here username=host.tld represents the email address [email protected]. The user would of course still have to confirm it, but I believe this will help get people signing up by letting them know about our mailing list at a key point and taking some work off them. What do you think? Any practical steps that could help us implement this? Cheers, Joe [1] http://issues.apache.org/bloodhound/register [2] http://www.niso.org/khelp/kmlm/user_help/html/email_commands.html -- Joe Dreimann | *User Experience Designer* | WANdisco<http://www.wandisco.com/> @jdreimann <https://twitter.com/jdreimann> * * *Join one of our free daily demo sessions on* *Scaling Subversion for the Enterprise <http://www.wandisco.com/training/webinars>* THIS MESSAGE AND ANY ATTACHMENTS ARE CONFIDENTIAL, PROPRIETARY, AND MAY BE PRIVILEGED. If this message was misdirected, WANdisco, Inc. and its subsidiaries, ("WANdisco") does not waive any confidentiality or privilege. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify us immediately and destroy the message without disclosing its contents to anyone. Any distribution, use or copying of this e-mail or the information it contains by other than an intended recipient is unauthorized. The views and opinions expressed in this e-mail message are the author's own and may not reflect the views and opinions of WANdisco, unless the author is authorized by WANdisco to express such views or opinions on its behalf. All email sent to or from this address is subject to electronic storage and review by WANdisco. Although WANdisco operates anti-virus programs, it does not accept responsibility for any damage whatsoever caused by viruses being passed.
