http://github.com/blog/674-introducing-organizations
On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 12:34 AM, Martin Sustrik <[email protected]> wrote: > Brian Granger wrote: >> >> * Make sure you in the zeromq github Context. >> * Go to my ellisonbg/pyzmq repo and click "fork" >> * Github will ask you to what context you want to work, select "zeromq" >> * This will create zeromq/pyzmq. >> * You can then go to the admin tab of zeromq/pyzmq and select the Team >> you want to control it. >> >> If you want to create a pyzmq team in the zeromq org you can or you >> can just put me in the zeromq Owners team. > > I've forked the repo. However, in the admin tab the only option I've seen > was the 'collaborators' tab. I've added you there but I suppose you've had > something else in mind. OK, it sounds like the zeromq account is not an Organization github account, but just a regular user account that is being used for a project. Recently, github introduced the idea of an Organization: http://github.com/blog/674-introducing-organizations These are free for open source projects and *really* help in running open source projects with many repos and many people who work on those repos. I mistakenly thought that zeromq was already an Organization. Could you make the zeormq github account into an Organization account? It is possible to convert a personal account to an Organization account and the blog post tells how. Cheers, Brian > Martin > > -- Brian E. Granger, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo [email protected] [email protected] _______________________________________________ zeromq-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev
