The Fedora Project is the free community release from enterprise
Linux giant Red Hat. It's a testing ground.
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FedoraMyths#MYTH_-_Fedora_is_unstable_and_unreliable.2C_just_a_testbed_for_bleeding-edge_software
On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 12:46 AM, Rahul Sundaram
2008/6/13 Markus McLaughlin [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
The real reason why I came up with the fedoraLife concept is to have a
Fedora Studio spin established that either has the fedoraLife suite that
enhances already established software OR puts the already established
software front and center. So
2008/6/13 Markus McLaughlin [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
The real reason why I came up with the fedoraLife concept is to have a
Fedora Studio spin established that either has the fedoraLife suite that
enhances already established software OR puts the already established
software front and center. So
Hey all,
Can I get some feedback on this? The third is an easy answer - but the
first two are a little trickier. Why can't people just send an e-mail,
and I have no idea about legal!
Best,
Jon
-- Forwarded message --
From: Mike McGrath [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 2008/6/17
On Tue, 2008-06-17 at 14:58 +0100, Jonathan Roberts wrote:
Hey all,
Can I get some feedback on this? The third is an easy answer - but the
first two are a little trickier. Why can't people just send an e-mail,
and I have no idea about legal!
No idea about the email part -- it sounds
Ok, but that is the point since the beginning of the project, I think.. :D
On Mon, Jun 16, 2008 at 9:12 PM, Jeff Spaleta [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
2008/6/16 Lucas Saboya [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Srry, I don't understand what you're saying.. can u please re-explain ?
:D
When people are submitting
2008/6/17 Lucas Saboya [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Ok, but that is the point since the beginning of the project, I think.. :D
I don't anyone is arguing over the point. What I trying to suggest is
that being explicit concerning the licensing in the web submission
form matters. It should not be implied in
On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 5:58 AM, Jonathan Roberts
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So I've got a couple of questions First of which being why can't
people just email this stuff?
They can.
How did people add feeds to the planet before it was recently
automated? Didn't we essentially email someone
On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 1:41 AM, Valent Turkovic
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There are two projects; saya-videoeditor [3], myvideoeditor [4]
saya currently relies on the OpenVIP media framework..which uses ffmpeg.
the reliance on ffmpeg makes its nearly impossible to include in
Fedora. I can not
why cant we use another free video format that doesn't have this kind of
trouble, shouldn't save us a lot of time and sake ? :D
On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 9:57 PM, Jeff Spaleta [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 1:41 AM, Valent Turkovic
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There are two
Hi all,
In our previous APAC ambassadors meeting we were discussing about this idea[1].
Generally the final/pre-final year engineering students need to do
some project work on a topic.
What I personally saw that they desperately search for one.
we can make a lot of new contributors if we
Our campus has this thing called Corporate Scholars program where they will
do their senior project based on the Corporation actual project. They will
be given specifications and so on. I guess this would be a good way if Red
Hat would like to sponsor.
www.calstatela.edu
Let me know anytime
Lucas Saboya wrote:
why cant we use another free video format that doesn't have this kind of
trouble, shouldn't save us a lot of time and sake ? :D
We use, the format is Ogg Theora and it is free.
The problem is *the tools*. The tools for editing Theora videos are...
let's say immature.
There
hi,
The idea is really great.. Im a college going student just entering 3rd
semester in Computer sciences .. and am already looking for programmes and
training to add to my CV for a better job.. My college, Manipal Institute of
technology, Manipal, India, has just recently become a part of
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