Danny Angus wrote:
Well, geez. I could have told you that. Why do you think I keep
my hair long?
To stop people from marrying you?
When I cut my hair someone married me almost straight away.
Yes.. same here. Used to have it down to my shoulders. I looked like a
big poodle. Now I shave it.
-A
* Danny Angus wrote:
>> Well, geez. I could have told you that. Why do you think I keep
>> my hair long?
>
> To stop people from marrying you?
> When I cut my hair someone married me almost straight away.
That's your very own fault >:->
nd
--
package Hacker::Perl::Another::Just;print
[EMAIL PR
> > Well, geez. I could have told you that. Why do you think I keep
> > my hair long?
>
> To stop people from marrying you?
"people" in men and women ? In Holland both is legal btw :)
Mvgr,
Martin
> Well, geez. I could have told you that. Why do you think I keep
> my hair long?
To stop people from marrying you?
When I cut my hair someone married me almost straight away.
d.
--On Tuesday, January 07, 2003 14:48:18 -0800 Greg Stein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
daedalus to support building Subversion. Next up is to try building it.
Assuming that works, then yes: we're going to enable a Subversion server
on icarus, and we'll have clients on icarus and daedalus.
Ah, heck,
Greg Stein wrote:
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 05:08:19PM -0500, James Taylor wrote:
You are stating that:
0) download a working copy [this is done only once]
1) go to a page
2) edit it
3) save it
4) commit the page
is comparably simple with
Feh. I said no such thing. I said that if you wanted to
(not aimed at everyone...you're just standing in the way ;-) )
Though I must say listening to people who aren't known for writing
excessive amounts of documentation debate documentation tools for people
who do is extremely amusing.. Meanwhile a previously excluded
documentor: http://nagoya.apach
- The RSS feed doesn't present the deltas. It appears that events are
getting lost.
I have nothing useful to contribute to the conversation. I'm just
working on fixing that...
http://nagoya.apache.org/wiki/apachewiki.cgi?WikiProjectPage
-Andy
Giacomo Pati wrote:
We use JSPWiki in our company together with the Hula server (can't
remember the URL but Google will know it) which checks a Wikipage
(NotificationList in our case) that users can put their address and
notification time into it and get a mail with the diffs of the last 24
hours (
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, at 06:15 PM, Greg Stein wrote:
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 06:08:25PM -0500, Ben Hyde wrote:
...
Greg Stein wrote:
In no way did I say it was "comparably simple" to standard Wiki
editing. Of
course not... jeez, just how small do you think my brain is? :-)
Well my brain got
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 06:08:25PM -0500, Ben Hyde wrote:
>...
> Greg Stein wrote:
> > In no way did I say it was "comparably simple" to standard Wiki
> > editing. Of
> > course not... jeez, just how small do you think my brain is? :-)
>
> Well my brain got a lot smaller after I cut my hair, so b
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003, Stefano Mazzocchi wrote:
> It can hardly be simpler than what it already is. Introducing an
> explicit version control cycle (because commits are exactly that) might
> seem relatively simple (or even totally natural) for somebody (all of us
> if we are committers) that is used
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, at 05:01 PM, Stefano Mazzocchi wrote:
Greg Stein wrote:
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 11:53:52AM -0500, Ben Hyde wrote:
...
It turns out if you build a event driven mail based notification
system you shortly there after discover that it's too painful to
use. The Wiki model
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 02:01:43PM -0800, Stefano Mazzocchi wrote:
>...
> Paint me PITA, but I think it's worth playing devil's advocate on this
> muddy ground.
Play devil's advocate, sure, but I'd suggest a bit more research... the
ground isn't actually muddy :-)
Cheers,
-g
--
Greg Stein, htt
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 05:08:19PM -0500, James Taylor wrote:
> > You are stating that:
> >
> > 0) download a working copy [this is done only once]
> > 1) go to a page
> > 2) edit it
> > 3) save it
> > 4) commit the page
> >
> > is comparably simple with
Feh. I said no such thing. I sa
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, at 02:08 PM, James Taylor wrote:
If it means I can edit the page in my fancy editor of choice rather
than
a dumb web browser then it is much simpler.
++1!
-a
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 04:48:11PM -0500, Noel J. Bergman wrote:
> > Bah. Use SubWiki, check out the Wiki pages into a working copy, make all
> > your changes, then commit them. Regular commit email sends the full bunch
> of
> > changes.
>
> <> Does this mean that Subversion is coming soon to rep
> You are stating that:
>
> 0) download a working copy [this is done only once]
> 1) go to a page
> 2) edit it
> 3) save it
> 4) commit the page
>
> is comparably simple with
>
> 1) go to a page
> 2) edit it
> 3) save it
>
> and I disagree.
If it means I can edit the page in my
Greg Stein wrote:
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 11:53:52AM -0500, Ben Hyde wrote:
...
It turns out if you build a event driven mail based notification system
you shortly there after discover that it's too painful to use. The
Wiki model results in editors writing changes so they can preview; and
in ta
> Bah. Use SubWiki, check out the Wiki pages into a working copy, make all
> your changes, then commit them. Regular commit email sends the full bunch
of
> changes.
<> Does this mean that Subversion is coming soon to replace a CVS
repository near us?
Not that updating a Wiki that way is in the s
On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 11:53:52AM -0500, Ben Hyde wrote:
>...
> It turns out if you build a event driven mail based notification system
> you shortly there after discover that it's too painful to use. The
> Wiki model results in editors writing changes so they can preview; and
> in tangles of
Danny Angus wrote:
Therefore 13% of all hits are people checking for new changes.
So either we're all bored or theres a demonstrable need for effective
notification.
Yes I know, I was supposed to be looking at that too.
d.
It turns out if you build a event driven mail based notification system
you
> Therefore 13% of all hits are people checking for new changes.
So either we're all bored or theres a demonstrable need for effective
notification.
Yes I know, I was supposed to be looking at that too.
d.
Since ~6:22 Jan 3 the wiki has had
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/disk/raid0/home/acoliver $ grep -i apachewiki
/opt/apache/logs/nagoya.apache.org.access.log |wc -l
6194 hits
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/disk/raid0/home/acoliver $ grep -i "action=rss"
/opt/apache/logs/nagoya.apache.org.access.log |wc -l
502 of
24 matches
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