Thank you Paul for the detailed explanation, we'll do it exactly as
you wish ;-)
Jonathan: Feel free to include another table on the bottom of the
D810 wiki page about kubuntu specific things. We'll have a great wiki
page for the D810 users.
--
Üdvözlettel
Somlyai Tamás
On Feb 28, 2006, at 6:41 PM, Paul Sladen wrote:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2006, Jonathan Jesse wrote:
On Tuesday 28 February 2006 11:05, Somlyai Tamás wrote:
On Feb 28, 2006, at 4:53 PM, Paul Sladen wrote:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2006, Jonathan Jesse wrote:
Hi Tamas and Jonathan,
I looked into updating the wiki page [..]
wording [..about emailing first..] just serves to block progress;
I own a Canonical supplied Dell Latitude D810,
Everyone is working together to make the best status page they can
for a
laptop, regardless of where the hardware came from. More updates
mean a
better report.
please don't tell others to replace my wiki page
Jonathan was wanting to update the D810 wiki-page as was delayed by
seeing
your request to be contacted first.
It is possibly to be automatically emailed when *any* update
happens and
this is done with the "Subscribe" feature. You will receive a 'diff'
showing you exactly what was changed and then you can go and work
out how to
better combine this with the status report already there (if
required).
with lines like I'm not contactable,
[..] I selected the email address from the wiki page and it bounced
This is something you'll need to work out the person who attempted
to email
you and got the bounce; It is logical to assume that if somebody
has a
bouncing email address that they receipient maybe "uncontactable" or
"missing in action" and the best they can do then is report it;
either via
the wiki or to a mailing-list.
In this case, that seems to have worked perfectly! You've bounced
up and
said "I'm here", "I'm working on Flight 4" and discovered somebody
else who
is also testing the same hardware and who you can work closely with in
future to keep the report up to date at an even faster pace.
I think there should be a difference between Kubuntu and Ubuntu
testing
and wiki pages if they are handeling laptops differently
Ideally everything should be kept together; 95% of the information
is the
same---in this case the physical hardware and even the hotkey
mappings are
the same as they are part of the core low-level Ubuntu system.
The only things that are different at the moment are whether hotkeys
actually perform the action they should be doing and pop up the
appropriate
box on the screen.
Please keep the information together, with a little sub-section about
anything that is different under Kubuntu in the comments section at
the
bottom of the page.
Hope that helps and please help each other to keep testing!
-Paul
--
Britain is just cold, in a pesky way. London, GB
--
laptop-testing-team mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/laptop-testing-team