Maybe it can be of general interest to estimate the degree of
involvement needed to be a tester. In other words: it's a task that
needs a lot of human intervention or it's just a matter of having the
right hw resources and some skill on freenet and other technologies
and the test can go on its own?
Cheers,
Emanuele
On Wed, Oct 01, 2003 at 02:50:17AM +1200, David McNab wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm seeking people who are interested in testing a brand-new Freenet
> application.
>
> All skill levels welcome.
>
> System requirements - either:
> * Linux or BSD, with Python2.2 or later, and glibc 2.3.1 or later
> OR
> * Windows 98SE, 2000 or XP
>
> The program in question is something I feel to be a milestone strategic
> application for Freenet, one which I feel will provide a very welcome
> addition to the overall Freenet offering.
>
> It provides new and very useful functionality (IMHO) in a manner highly
> accessible to even newer users.
>
> 14,000 lines of code (including utility modules), produced in pieces
> over several months. Fully free and open source. Windows installer is
> 1.7MB, including doco.
>
> I don't want to say any more on-list until it passes a round or two of
> stability and reliability tests with live users. At that point, I'll be
> announcing all over the place.
>
> Hoping to work with an adventurous team of about 3-10 testers.
>
> State of code at the moment - stable and functional within my own test
> environment, working with both Freenet and Entropy nodes. Likely to
> break in places in initial live tests, so there'll be a bit of 'send me
> your logfiles' going on in the early stages. No RTFS though.
>
> Interested persons please contact me off-list:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> --
> Cheers
> David
>
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