Hi. 2020-10-16 15:47 UTC+02:00, Andrew Bernard <[email protected]>: > To provide a focus and a sub-community for LilyPond users and those > interested in openLilyLib, I have established a Discourse forum here: > > https://discourse.openlilylib.space > > All are welcome to join. It's a forum and a parallel mailing list for > support, help, development talk, and all matters about openLilyLib. > > This runs on my personally managed Linux VPS systems, and Discourse is > fully open source, in accordance with my policy of using open source > wherever possible. > > When setting up new services such as this that utilise email for > functions, one inevitably hits the demons of the spam blacklisting > houses, which can aggressively block email. I have a lot of experience > with this and I try my best to avoid this, by using the Amazon Simple > Email Service, which provides the requisite degree of credibility to > the spam houses. I mention this because initial emails can still end > up in your spam folder, as some mailers alsoe need to be trained. If > expected mail does not appear, check Junk. Contact me if there are > persistent issues. > > I am critically aware that this is independent of this mailing list > and somewhat splittist, but I feel OLL is important enough to have its > own ecosystem,
Maybe it's so important that it should keep this list's subscribers aware of its usefulness and progress? > and I am not sure that people on the LilyPond user list > necessarily want to read ling threads on details of Scheme parsers and > package code development and git topics. Sure. However, average users might want to be informed when some significant improvement has been made such that there is now a new recommended/easy way for accomplishing certain tasks. Regards, Gilles P.S. I do not follow the "dev" list; maybe the reason why I've never really understood why OLL is not meant to be part of LilyPond itself. > > [...]
