On Mon, Nov 08, 2004 at 10:11:40PM +1100, Craige McWhirter wrote: > When: > Saturday, November 27, 10:00am - 10:00pm > Where: > CSE/UNSW Kensington, "Seminar Room" > Map / Transport: http://slug.org.au/events/cse.html > > We're holding a Debian RC Bug Squish and general Code Fest. The idea of > of the day is to have a social, coding day, learn a few things, close > some Debian RC Bugs or just hack the day away on what ever takes your > fancy. For those with a punting itch or a taste for bloodsports, we'll > be running a book on whether this boast > http://lists.slug.org.au/archives/slug/2004/11/msg00231.html will be > fulfilled. Get in early for ring side seats. There'll be a 22:00 til > late kick-on at a nearby house with plenty of room and net access for > those with a need for it. > > Food and drink will be organised throughout the day and dinner be held > afterwards at a venue decided on by the participants. There's also ample > on-site parking.
Hi Craig, Hi Sluggers, Unfortunately I will be unable to make this worthy event on account of a) not being in Sydney on the day and b) it being my birthday (though that doesn't imply that I don't hack on such occasions). If any one wants to take a look at the small mountain of bugs logged against the various kernel packages then happiness will instantly become Debian users all over the world. You can find (most) of these by looking for bugs logged against [EMAIL PROTECTED] in the BTS. http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?which=maint&data=debian-kernel%40lists.debian.org&archive=no 2.4.27 and 2.6.8 are both slated for inclusion with Sarge, so please focus on them. 2.4.26 and 2.6.7 are _old_ and no longer maintained and should be removed from d.o before Sarge. Bugs against those kernels should either be closed or moved to 2.4.27 or 2.6.8 respectively. 2.6.9 is _new_ and at this stage there are no plans to include this in Sarge, however bugs in 2.6.9 usually effect 2.6.8 as well, so backports are welcome. In particular if people happen to have the particular hardware that a bug is logged against and are able to test out patches from the BTS or elsewhere this would be imensely useful. If you log any discoveries/fixes/whatever in the BTS, send them to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (BTS messages go to this list anyway), or for the somewhat bashful send them to me directly, I will try and make sure your contributions get included, and more importantly help more people to be able to use debian on more systems. Hooray! -- Horms [EMAIL PROTECTED] / [EMAIL PROTECTED] Debian Kernel Team Member, amongst other things -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
