On Mon, 2001-10-01 at 11:26, Jack Moffitt wrote:
> > What a joke! Everytime I go in, there's about 10 users there but
> > no one is talking. No one replies to questions like "Anyone there?" or
> > "Anyone home?" There's just silence.
>
> It takes a bit to get these things going. The #vorbis
>I'm sure that if the gurus on the list started joining, the conversation
>would pick up.
i don't know if i'm a guru, but i do know that i don't do irc. the
last time i did anything like that was on bitnet in 1986. i'm done.
--p
___
Alsa-devel mailing
> What a joke! Everytime I go in, there's about 10 users there but
> no one is talking. No one replies to questions like "Anyone there?" or
> "Anyone home?" There's just silence.
It takes a bit to get these things going. The #vorbis channel was like
that except for monty and i talking and
On Sat, 29 Sep 2001, Petter [iso-8859-1] Sundlöf wrote:
> We've set up a channel on OPN (irc.openprojects.net), called #ALSA.
> Developers are welcome, as are users. People keep dropping in with
> questions.
>
> We think it's a good means of support
What a joke! Everytime I go in, there
Hi.
We've set up a channel on OPN (irc.openprojects.net), called #ALSA.
Developers are welcome, as are users. People keep dropping in with
questions.
We think it's a good means of support, since most don't feel compelled
enough to subscribe to a mailing list for help (and the documentation is
no
Hi.
We've set up a channel on OPN (irc.openprojects.net), called #ALSA.
Developers are welcome, as are users. People keep dropping in with
questions.
We think it's a good means of support, since most don't feel compelled
enough to subscribe to a mailing list for help (and the documentation is
no