Tim Harper <[email protected]> writes: >> If you really insisted on having Vimpulse somewhere more "cool" than >> Assembla, I'd suggest Gitorious, not GitHub. Not only because Gitorious >> is libre, but also because it's project-centric, not person-centric as >> GitHub. > > You can set up organizations in GitHub now, which you can use as a > project centric location
Didn't know about that, thanks. (<http://github.com/blog/674-introducing-organizations> for anyone interested) >> Anyway, I personally really like the mailing list model -- when you send >> patches to a mailing list, more people have chance to look at it and >> chime in when they have anything to say on the matter. > This is a good point, and it has its merits. However, have you ever used > the network browser in GitHub? It makes it really easy for people to > have multiple forks of a project, and if somebody happens to create a > patch that, for whatever reason, isn't merged in, it makes it really > easy to find. (I've used it many times to find patches for abandoned > projects). Yeah, the network browser is nice, as are other GitHub features, although I don't really have any use for them. :-) Maybe it's just me, but I really prefer the "traditional" e-mail + patches way (even with projects that use GitHub and even though I do have a GitHub account). Git makes that totally painless anyway and the open discussion possibilities are unmatched by the hosting sites' fancy features. Maybe Web 2.0/3.0 whatever is the future with things like Google Wave and whatnot, but right now it all just feels like too much hassle (no unified UI, best-used-with-a-"modern"-browser, being tied to a particular provider etc.) for too little or no profit to me compared to e-mail. Štěpán _______________________________________________ implementations-list mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/implementations-list
