BTW - what lead me to lilypond.org was a desire to give a contribution to its development. The text for the new item for 2012 meeting mentions contributions for David's work. It was clicking on the link that showed lilynet.net was broken.
Guy Stalnaker [email protected] On Sun, Dec 15, 2013 at 1:02 PM, Guy Stalnaker <[email protected]> wrote: > If he is not amendable to contact via email or this list it seems unlikely > he's amendable to contact via Twitter DM. The situation bodes ill for > long-term website viability. I know the organization is cash-strapped, but > perhaps shifting to a more supported/supportable web site venue seems wise. > Are the "owners" of lilypond.org and lilynet.net still involved in the > project? There are a plethora of hosting sites that offer CMS capabilities > and unlimited storage for <$200/year (hostforweb.com is one such company > with whom I manage a website for a local choral organization). I know the > lilypond content is both extensive and complicated, but having an > incommunicative site editor seems, to put it mildly, problematic. > > Guy Stalnaker > [email protected] > > > On Sun, Dec 15, 2013 at 10:31 AM, Federico Bruni <[email protected]>wrote: > >> 2013/12/15 David Kastrup <[email protected]> >> >>> It's not the links that are bad. It's the web site. It has become >>> difficult to reach Valentin, the website maintainer, and he has not been >>> active on the mailing lists for a long time, either. >>> >> >> he is very active on twitter: >> https://twitter.com/vvillenave >> >> has anyone with a twitter account tried to contact him? >> >> >
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