I will study the question during april. Can Jabber Foundation store the actual datas ? or will I have to start from the beginning ? But like said Artur, how many project are interested to be hosted, and are they interested to participate to expenses of hosting ?
Regards, -- Nahuel ANGELINETTI Jabber/XMPP : [EMAIL PROTECTED] Le Tue, 13 Mar 2007 10:54:08 -0600, Peter Saint-Andre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a écrit : > Nahuel ANGELINETTI wrote: > > Le Tue, 13 Mar 2007 09:27:20 -0600, > > Peter Saint-Andre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a écrit : > > > >> Nahuel ANGELINETTI wrote: > >> > >>> can we know why this server is shutted down ? > >> 1. The JabberStudio code base is unmaintained and no one has > >> volunteered to maintain it. > > > > So why not can i propose my competences ? > > It's open source: > > http://jabberstudio.org/projects/jabberstudio/project/view.php > > Feel free to fork it. The original developers have disappeared. > > >> 2. JabberStudio uses a lot of bandwidth (probably 90% of the > >> bandwidth used by the XSF infrastructure) and our hosting provider > >> is unhappy. > > > > In france we have hosters like dedibox which provide 100Mbps > > connection ( without limit of transfered datas ), with a server > > 2GHz, 1GB of DDRAM, and 160 GB of hdd, for only 59$ by month ( i'm > > not doing an advertissment, just information ), and the possibility > > to have RAID system. > > Feel free to talk with a hosting provider about hosting your fork. > > >> 3. We have continued to have trouble with JabberStudio, first the > >> rootkit 2 years ago and yesterday what was effectively a DOS (no > >> I'm not going to discuss the details). > > > > ( point 2 ) > > (point 4 ) > > >> 4. The admin (c'est moi) doesn't have time for all this fun. > > > > I think i can have. > > Good luck. :) > > >> 5. There are plenty of great options out there (Google Code > >> Hosting, Berlios, SourceForge, etc.) that provide dedicated > >> project hosting, better bug tracking tools, and so on. Go use 'em. > > > > Sourceforge, i think it's a company who host/develop it, and not > > open source, too bad, like Google Code Hosting. > > Fork the code, find a host, and have fun. I'm finished with > JabberStudio, and so is our hosting provider. > > Peter >
