This will be awesome. Not using JA as long as Andy but I really like how 
it works for a gantry machine.

JT


On 6/10/2016 9:01 PM, Jeff Epler wrote:
> I propose that we vote the following items at the next IRC meeting
> (Saturday, June 25, 2016-06-25T1600Z):
>
> That we
>   * Thank all developers who have contributed to the joints-axes project,
>     but particularly Dewey Garrett, Michael Geszkiewicz, Alex Joni, and
>     Andy Pugh for their major contributions
>   * Rebase and then merge the most current "joints-axes" branch to the
>     linuxcnc.org master branch
>   * Recommend to developers and to release manager Moses McKnight
>     to shift the emphasis of master branch development to stability
>     rather than new features, so that we can release "2.7+1" with JA
>     features sooner rather than later
>
> We haven't held an IRC meeting for quite some time, so if you are
> unfamiliar with the process (I am!) you can read about it on our wiki:
>      http://wiki.linuxcnc.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?MeetingsOnIRC
> The next step is to discuss the merits of the proposal in this mailing
> list prior to the IRC meeting and vote.
>
> If you are unfamiliar with "joints-axes", it is a project to improve how
> LinuxCNC handles machines which do not have a simple 1-to-1
> correspondence between motors and axis letters.  For example, a gantry
> with 2 motors on the "Y" axis works much better with the new features
> that "joints-axes" adds: you can jog any axis incrementally, and apply
> soft limits to axes.  Users of more exotic machines like the "linear
> delta" will also see improvements.
>
> Documentation for this branch is online, particularly conversion
> instructions for .ini and .hal files:
>      
> http://linuxcnc.org/docs/ja/html/getting-started/updating-linuxcnc.html#_hal_changes_updates_for_joints_axes
>
> If you are aware of regressions in the joints-axes branch, I encourage
> you to document them with github issues as soon as possible, and request
> that we tag them with the (just added) joints-axes label so we can track
> them.
>
> Jeff
>
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What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic
patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are 
consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, 
J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity 
planning reports. https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/305295220;132659582;e
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