On May 22, 2009, at 8:26 AM, Istvan Albert wrote:

> It would help a great deal if you always also pushed after each
> commit. That way new information is spread out over a longer period
> and is coming in digestible chunks.

I can definitely do that, if we can figure out what will play well  
with the RSS reporting.  I usually do such work on an experimental  
branch, and only merge to master once a given mini-project is done and  
fully tested.  Thus the large chunk size that I've been pushing to  
github.  Would it be better if I constantly pushed each commit to an  
experimental branch on github?  Since I don't receive RSS from github  
on my own commits (or anyone else's, come to think of it), I don't  
know exactly what it is reporting.  Is it reporting new commits on any  
branch or just master? Will it be better for you if I push each commit  
on my experimental branch (to an experimental branch on my github  
repo), and later merge to master, then push master to github?

-- Chris

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