I don¹t mean to be a pain, but is there a way of subscribing to the new list
without having to join google? I really don¹t want to have another account
to manage, especially with them.
I¹m happy to do it through nabble as I already use them.
Z.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Eight years ago in 2002, I
Unfortunately no. You would have had to join something -- or others
would have. Many people have google accounts, so in addition to all
of the othe benefits of Google Code, we leveraged that too.
Clinton
On 2010-05-30, Zoran Avtarovski zo...@sparecreative.com wrote:
I don¹t mean to be a pain,
Hi Clinton,
I'm sure you all had more than one good reason to leave the ASF home
and starting a new adventure. I hope this will be the time to
encourage people to submit MyBatis subprojects (3rd parts
integrations, caches integrations etc etc) and join the team.
Good luck!!!
Simo
Two questions:
1) Why the name change? Couldn't you keep the iBatis name even under
Google Code?
2) Will you apply for an open-source license from JIRA or will you use
Google Code's bug tracker? (I prefer the former from a usability point
of view)
Gili
On 21/05/2010 3:54 AM, Clinton
Thanks for the questions Gili.
1) Why the name change? Couldn't you keep the iBatis name even under
Google Code?
When I donated iBATIS to the ASF, it was unfortunately irreversible. This
is due to the fact that Apache is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. They
cannot turn over what might be
Hi Clinton,
On 21/05/2010 10:04 AM, Clinton Begin wrote:
Thanks for the questions Gili.
1) Why the name change? Couldn't you keep the iBatis name even
under Google Code?
When I donated iBATIS to the ASF, it was unfortunately irreversible.
This is due to the fact that Apache is a
Anyone can fork the code. But you cannot call it iBATIS.
As for the issues, we have no intention of migrating all of the issues from
Jira to Google Code. We've moved the iBATIS 3 open tickets, only because
there were only 20 and it was easy to do. The Jira system will be frozen by
Sunday.