On Jun 6, 2011, at 4:33 PM, Upayavira wrote:
I think you might want to reinstall (or uninstall) your dropbox
plugin/app. It seems to be getting in the way. The blog site works fine
for me.
Interesting that the sole comment currently on that post is obvious link spam.
S.
Upayavira
On
with providers that get this Right?
Thanks,
S.
--
Sander Temme
scte...@apache.org
PGP FP: FC5A 6FC6 2E25 2DFD 8007 EE23 9BB8 63B0 F51B B88A
View my availability: http://tungle.me/sctemme
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On Nov 11, 2010, at 10:41 AM, Lars Eilebrecht wrote:
Sander Temme wrote:
One of my customers is looking for a secure hosting facility in Europe: they
want to host an application close to their customers and need to see
sufficient security in the way of lockable racks/cages, proper
On Jul 23, 2009, at 9:27 AM, Henri Yandell wrote:
If any of you committers are at OSCON, feel free to meet up for dinner
at Gordon Biersch [7:30pm]:
Whoops, this was a test run that I left in there during the
Hackathon. Sorry about that.
I removed them from crontab.
S.
Begin forwarded message:
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cron Daemon)
Date: July 25, 2005 7:01:55 AM PDT
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Cron [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Oct 3, 2004, at 5:24 PM, Stephen McConnell wrote:
None that I know of. There is no private discussion list for
committers,
unlike [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The community@apache.org mailing list is used by the participants in
the
Apache Software Foundation to discuss general topics of interest to the
On Oct 3, 2004, at 7:22 PM, Stephen McConnell wrote:
list should be private or public and I seem to remember that a
vote/poll
was taken at that time - and it was my understanding that archives of
this list would not be public (consistent with the statement on the ASF
pages I referenced above).
On Sep 27, 2004, at 9:00 AM, Rodent of Unusual Size wrote:
You can't just do that without the committer's consent. They'd have to
supply their coordinates somewhere and not everyone may want to
divulge
where they are located.
i *think* tetsuya meant, 'how about sending mail to the committers@
A It says it requires ActiveX. Is Google now part of
the evil
empire ?? :o)
How about Linux/Unix/MacX users, are we totally left out?
Works fine for me in Safari/Mac and FireFox/Win32.
S.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.temme.net/sander/
PGP FP: 51B4 8727 466A 0BC3
Hi Ken,
On Jul 7, 2004, at 6:01 PM, Rodent of Unusual Size wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
suddenly i'll be at linuxworld, but i don't know if i can help out or
not.
Thanks for your offer, but we declined IDG's offer of the booth
space... I didn't get enough volunteers at the time to
Hi Rich,
On Jun 8, 2004, at 4:00 PM, Rich Bowen wrote:
I'd love to be there, and I would, without a doubt, like to hang out at
the ASF booth. However, alas, I can't make it unless someone at IDG
sends me a ticket. I missed the CFP, and I am rather far away. :-(
Well, hold those thoughts for the
software development
to the ASF?
4) How can people contribute? {time, money}
5) How can companies contribute? {people, money, hardware, services}
...
-aaron
On Jun 3, 2004, at 12:45 AM, Sander Temme wrote:
Dear Apache community,
The Apache Software Foundation has been offered a booth in the .org
Pavilion
Dear Apache community,
The Apache Software Foundation has been offered a booth in the .org
Pavilion at the upcoming LinuxWorld Conference Expo. We're looking
for volunteers to staff this booth during the three days of the Expo:
Tuesday August 03, 2004 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday August 04,
May 2004, Sander Temme wrote:
I just got some snail mail spam from Linuxworld yesterday about the
San
Francisco show in August, and noted the existence of the .org
Pavilion®, sponsored by Oracle. Does, or can, the ASF get a table in
that friendly environment?
If so, I'm in the area so I could
Let's just register planetapache.org and be done with it.
+1
+1
Would the Foundation handle that, and host it, or would that have to be a
private initiative?
S.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.temme.net/sander/
PGP FP: 51B4 8727 466A 0BC3 69F4 B7B8 B2BE BC40 1529 24AF
I assume that people more knowledgeable than I will critique this, but
this works for me...
I don't know if I'm more knowledgeable, but I have in the past volunteered
to set up a centrally organized keysigning party at Apachecon, and still
intend to do so if the planners will have me...
Note
P.S. However, still I can not build relationship
with asf *members* ... dohhh...
But you can do that via-via. That's what the 'web of trust' is all about.
S.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.temme.net/sander/
PGP FP: 51B4 8727 466A 0BC3 69F4 B7B8 B2BE BC40 1529 24AF
i like the idea of having them during sessions. diversity is good,
and since it's so free-format, and the same gurus can come back
(bwb -- bribed with beer) for encores, i think it's a win.
You mean... there will be a keg behind the table? I'm in!
S.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
My fuzzy idea is that members of the community would put ICBM tags[1]
on some web page of their. That can drive the map building. Use the
[1] http://geourl.com/
That lands me on a domain squatter. It's a cool idea, but I'm a little
apprehensive about being targeted by ICBMs...
S.
--
Please, allow me to restart the voting in order to make it easier to
reach some consensus since it's hard to interpret the results of the
previous one.
VOTE 1: would you like to make it possible for non-committers to read
this mail list thru a web archive?
[x] +1 yes, let's make it
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