On Mon, 24 Jan 2005, Christian Perrier wrote:
We have completely abandoned the DDTP effort now, as far as I am aware. Nicolas Bertolissio made several contributions to the code in the past, up to end 2003. I'm not sure whether he still contributes to it.
IMHO it is a real shame that one part of the i18n effort of Debian just silently dies simply because one person (namely Grisu) is (for whatever reason) not able to continue his work. This has to components:
1. Package descriptions are one of the first interfaces we do present to our users about the software Debian contains. If we want to attract non-IT professionals we should not expect them to speak English. So by not providing translated descriptions we increase the hurdle of installing Debian for a very huge group of users and this definitely sucks.
2. More general: What about efforts which are more or less driven by a one person project. If this person is not able to continue his work, should this project die? For packages we have a procedure to follow, but what of this kind of projects? Gathering translators for DDTP was a process which relayed on a working DDTP server. If it is not continuosely used and known to be error prone all work of the past is wasted. This might mean that this work is not really needed - but as I tried to mention in 1. this would be the ignorant point of view from computer geeks. So the meta question is: Are we able to support infrastructural works if their maintainer does not continue to work on it.
Kind regards
Andreas.
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