that's a restriction made by the service we choose. issues are publicly visible here:
http://bugs.pharo.org and there you also can register your self so you can also edit issues in fogbugz. so yes... is public in the "non-restricted access" meaning of the word. Esteban On Aug 8, 2013, at 4:57 PM, Mark Bestley <news{@bestley.co.uk> wrote: > Igor Stasenko <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On 8 August 2013 13:35, Levente Uzonyi > <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Thu, 8 Aug 2013, > Stéphane Ducasse wrote: > > g the issue on a public tracker means > private? > > > > > > How is that a "public tracker"? > > > > can you > elaborate? > https://pharo.fogbugz.com/ > is publicly accessible, no? or > what makes you think it is not public? > > > Take the first bug fix from the Pharo Summer release details at > <https://pharo.fogbugz.com/f/cases/10014/World-menu-System-Switch-User-s > erves-no-purpose> > > This gives a the fogbugz log in page so to get info you need to login so > not public (also are the bugs indexed by google?) > > > -- > Mark > >
