> suggests: the source for Uruk is already 100% free Trisquel, so the Please Say "uruk gnu/linux" not " uruk" When you say "uruk" you Refer to uruk project uruk is project and uruk gnu/linux is part from this project
se https://urukproject.org 2016-06-28 2:05 جرينتش-07:00, Ali Abdul Ghani <[email protected]>: >> I think you should at least make a sha256 checksum of all the scripts >> you are running and the assets you are installing. > now we use git > in git > if the Connection is stop > git will Tell the user > and Nothing will be install > > > > 2016-06-28 1:42 جرينتش-07:00, hellekin <[email protected]>: >> On 06/27/2016 01:43 PM, Jaromil wrote: >>> >>> I believe that Uruk can be 100% free even without offering a whole >>> package repository, but just by publishing all sources >>> >> >> I tend to agree with Jaromil (not only because we're brothers) that >> having your own repositories is the cherry on top of the cake. >> >> I understand that the "own repos" rule is to prevent anyone from making >> a distro out of another without core changes (why not participate in the >> original distribution directly?). >> >> Nevertheless I see Ali's case a bit differently than what the rule >> suggests: the source for Uruk is already 100% free Trisquel, so the >> argument that the developers should be able to patch things themselves >> seems a be redundant if not plain irrelevant; Ali's work for software >> freedom, accessibility, and growing community support around these has >> been exemplary. Not only he volunteered across free distros to >> facilitate the adoption of accessible software, he also brings together >> people locally in war-torn Iraq. >> >> For these reasons, the "no own repos" rule should be circumvented >> somehow. That could mean to work with Trisquel to integrate changes >> made in Uruk, or financial support to bring the Uruk team to capacity. >> >> In any case, judging on absolute values is not gonna work. >> >> == >> hk >> >> >> > > > -- > Emacs is the ground. We run around and act silly on top of it, and > when we die, may our remnants grace its ongoing incrementation. > -- Emacs is the ground. We run around and act silly on top of it, and when we die, may our remnants grace its ongoing incrementation.
