ApacheCon CFP closing soon (11 February)

2017-01-18 Thread Rich Bowen
Hello, fellow Apache enthusiast. Thanks for your participation, and
interest in, the projects of the Apache Software Foundation.

I wanted to remind you that the Call For Papers (CFP) for ApacheCon
North America, and Apache: Big Data North America, closes in less than a
month. If you've been putting it off because there was lots of time
left, it's time to dig for that inspiration and get those talk proposals in.

It's also time to discuss with your developer and user community whether
there's a track of talks that you might want to propose, so that you
have more complete coverage of your project than a talk or two.

We're looking for talks directly, and indirectly, related to projects at
the Apache Software Foundation. These can be anything from in-depth
technical discussions of the projects you work with, to talks about
community, documentation, legal issues, marketing, and so on. We're also
very interested in talks about projects and services built on top of
Apache projects, and case studies of how you use Apache projects to
solve real-world problems.

We are particularly interested in presentations from Apache projects
either in the Incubator, or recently graduated. ApacheCon is where
people come to find out what technology they'll be using this time next
year.

Important URLs are:

To submit a talk for Apache: Big Data -
http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apache-big-data-north-america/program/cfp
To submit a talk for ApacheCon -
http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apachecon-north-america/program/cfp

To register for Apache: Big Data -
http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apache-big-data-north-america/attend/register-
To register for ApacheCon -
http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/apachecon-north-america/attend/register-

Early Bird registration rates end March 12th, but if you're a committer
on an Apache project, you get the low committer rate, which is less than
half of the early bird rate!

For further updated about ApacheCon, follow us on Twitter, @ApacheCon,
or drop by our IRC channel, #apachecon on the Freenode IRC network. Or
contact me - rbo...@apache.org - with any questions or concerns.

Thanks!

Rich Bowen, VP Conferences, Apache Software Foundation

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Re: Sorry for the JIRA Spam

2017-01-18 Thread Stefan Bodewig
On 2017-01-18, Dominik Psenner wrote:

> Interesting. I dont mind the spam unless i have to look at all the content
> to filter the spam manually. Can i safely mark everything as read or is
> there anything i have to catch up with?

You can savely remove all comments for LOG4NET-435, there may be
something worth looking at for LOG4NET-539 and LOG4NET-549.

Stefan


Re: Sorry for the JIRA Spam

2017-01-18 Thread Dominik Psenner
Interesting. I dont mind the spam unless i have to look at all the content
to filter the spam manually. Can i safely mark everything as read or is
there anything i have to catch up with?

On 17 Jan 2017 9:54 p.m., "Stefan Bodewig"  wrote:

> Hi
>
> there's been a cycle where a mailer daemon responded to a JIRA ticket
> because of an "undeliverable" notification and this response caused a
> new comment creating a new mail to the same failing address ...
>
> Over the course of the day I've been wading through the comments,
> deleting them one by one. I thought JIRA notifications had been going to
> a special "issues" list and never thought I'd be spamming more people
> than just myself and Dominik. I'll stop deleting the comments
> immediately.
>
> Sorry for the noise
>
>   Stefan
>