you Henri Gomez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
- Did there is a need for a weblog package installed at apache.org
where commiters could put notes about THEIR ASF related works ?
-0 to hosting weblogs on official ASF sites. (I think I'm really a -1,
but haven't had enough time to think
Ben Hyde [EMAIL PROTECTED]
... There is no clearing house were I can
exchange one performance fix for two clear explanations.
LOL! If you want to talk Xalan, I'm sure I could scrape up a couple of
clear explanations if you have some performance enhancements to contribute...
Actually,
As often happens with an all-volunteer organization, there's a lot of nifty
stuff happening around ApacheCon, although it's not always obvious where to
find out about it.
Did you know that you can still get an Early Bird DISCOUNT to the 'con as
long as you register by October 19th?
Along with
Just a quick note to remind everyone that ApacheCon has it's own wiki
devoted to this year's con. Please participate with your con-related
topics. Plus, find out more about keysigning, BOFs, lightning talks,
what's where, and what's fun.
http://apachecon.com/wiki/index.php/HomePage
The more
Er, let's step back here. I view the PRC as being responsible for
policy, standards, meta-content that goes onto *.apache.org websites.
infrastructure@ will still be responsible for actually running the
websites. So, no, please do *not* post website patches to PRC lists!
In particular, other
A few random comments:
-- No doubt about it, many normal humans percieve it to be difficult to
really dive into OS groups either due to lack of professional-looking
documentation, getting used to using mailing lists, not feeling they're
geeky enough to be worthy, whatever. Overall we're still
Anyone with a PGP key on the pgp.com keyserver likely has gotten one or
more of these emails recently. I'm figuring it's legit, see
http://www.pgp.com/downloads/beta/globaldirectory/faq.html
- Any security types have a decent analysis of what the new pgp.com's
Directory really means, vs. using
Just to echo what Henri said: those of you who are committers on other
open source projects, remember both the wealth of services apache.org
provides as well as the fact that we have an all-volunteer infra team.
Many of them drink beer as well; if the world were a better place, then
they would
Free as in speech: please take my survey! Free as in beer: I might
buy you one!
I'm conducting a survey titled What ASF Committers Think About
Corporate Participation, and I'd love any and all ASF contributors to
participate.
Just follow this SurveyMonkey link below in the week:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Santiago Gala [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 2, 2008 2:48 PM, Leo Simons [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 2, 2008, at 1:20 AM, David Reiss wrote:
J Aaron Farr wrote:
snip...
1. You have to use subversion.
Why? Has been a vote done? where? I vote +1 for git if a
Great! We've always wanted to get more ASF-folk participation at other
conferences, but it's always hard to get enough committed individuals to
staff a formal booth. Both concom and PRC should be happy to help
provide organizational support, but we rely on you all to actually
attend the
Nóirín has an ApacheCon poster if someone can arrange to pick it up
ahead of time!
- Shane
Original Message
From: Nóirín Shirley [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I've tried to mail community@ a couple of times, but something's
breaking somewhere, so if you could pass on the message below,
Please note that the below message on the community@apache.org mailing
list is in *no* way related to the ASF's Sponsorship program nor to our
existing Donation programs, and is neither endorsed nor acknowledged by
the ASF.
For official information on becoming an ASF Sponsor, or if you happen
Rich Bowen rbo...@omniti.com wrote:
Hey, can one of you Sri Lankan gentlemen who is coming to ApacheCon
bring me a bottle of Arrack? I'd be glad to compensate you for your cost
and trouble, and buy you a couple drinks in Oakland. I've spoken to my
wife glowingly of the evening in Kitulgala
One of the things I like best about the ASF is that we're pragmatic, it
even says so on our front page: 8-)
The Apache projects are characterized by a collaborative, consensus
based development process, an open and pragmatic software license, and a
desire to create high quality software that
We do, but they're a little outdated, and are currently in a private SVN
repo [1], which is only available to members.
Community PMC: any interest in fixing those up (or making new ones) and
figuring out a way to make them more easily accessible to all committers?
- Shane
[1] (Note: private
I've been mulling over a better style for the community.a.o website.
While it's simple and to the point, it feels like the style could be
more welcoming, and have a few more signposts to specific topics on the
homepage.
It always feels easier to click through to something when perhaps the
harrison valetski ikste...@gmail.com wrote:
Is there a way to contact the list admin/owner for mail-archive?
All public mailing lists at the ASF are archived on our own systems.
You can find an archive for this community@ list here:
http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/community-dev/
Note that you should be somewhat cautious when people ask for formal
documentation. However replying to an email with a pointer to our
committer webpages (or any other publicly available, factual
information) is always fine to do.
So yes, if the person is a committer, it's fine to let the
On Wed, 30 Oct 2002, Stefano Mazzocchi wrote:
VOTE 1: would you like to make it possible for non-committers to read
this mail list thru a web archive?
[ ] +1 yes, let's make it readable
[ ] 0 don't know/don't care
[X] -1 no, let's keep it private -sc
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