About me:

I have a degree in computer engineering and I work in metalworking for
more than 15 years.
The two both combined resulted in interest in CNC and lately in linuxcnc.
I have built from scratch machines, and also rebuilt several machines.
Mostly (or all) are for sale, were I also give assistance.
I own a workshop where we have CNC lathes and CNC milling machines, and I
worked with several controllers in lathes. Currently I work with Okuma and
Fanuc.
I made my first machine with linuxcnc this year (1 finished, another on
the process), so I am green in linuxcnc. 

I program in C#, C++. Lately more C#.
I have several programs (commercial programs) that I maintain, all related
with metalworking and GCode. Currently those programs also output code for
linuxcnc controllers, that I am using daylly. Those were developed by me
and my collegues here at work, but I do not consider myself a highly
skilled programmer (C++ pointers were always confusing for me :-))

Married + 1 son + 1 daugther.

Regarding version control: No I do not have experience. Our work in
software development was only made with small teams (basically myself and
another person) so no need for a controled managment.

If I can be up to the job: I do not know, but I can try. I also do not
know the number of pathes to look for per week, or how fast this must be
done.

    Citando Chris Radek <ch...@timeguy.com>:
> On Wed, Jan 08, 2014 at 09:21:08AM +0000, Filipe Tomaz wrote:
>> But this needs to be clear to me, this is, the task(s) that I
>>        will make.
>   Hi Filipe,
>
>   Like others, I thank you for offering to do this, and I think it
>   would be a big help to the project.
>
>   I agree we should talk a bit about what the tasks would be.
>
>   I think a good patch steward would be good at working with the
>   submitter to get patches in good shape, where good shape means they
>   apply cleanly, they are free from unnecessary or problematic changes
>   like reformatting existing code or adding dos line endings, they
>   have log messages that are coherent and explain why the change is
>   being made, they include any necessary documentation changes, and so
>   on.
>
>   This doesn't mean you have to be a strong programmer in our
>   particular code, but it does probably mean you would need experience
>   with git (or at least another version control system) and code
>   development in general, and you would need a general feel for what's
>   documented where and how.
>
>   I understand that you don't have intimate knowledge about the
>   linuxcnc source code, and I think that's fine for doing this job.
>   But I wonder if you could tell us more about what experience you do
>   have with version control and other software projects?
>
>   Just that you are considering taking on this job makes me think that
>   if you do not yet have these technical skills you could develop
>   them.
>
>   In my experience working with patch submissions, this stuff is most
>   of the work, especially with people contributing for the first time
>   or two, and it can take a lot of back-and-forth.  Once this work is
>   done, a developer can jump right to the job of evaluating the
>   technical part of the change.
>
>   The other part of the patch-steward job is skillfully interacting
>   with people, where I'm less qualified to say what is necessary to do
>   a good job, or even how it should be done.  If you commit to this
>   position, I'd say that part would be up to you.
>
>   Chris
>
>    
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