On Sat, Oct 20, 2007 at 04:30:42PM -0400, Philippe Cloutier wrote: > >Judging by history, I don't think our current approach is exactly > >flourishing. We've mentioned sysadmins, list admins, web admins, all of > >those had breakages. We haven't mentioned bug admins, ftp admins, docs > >admins, key admins, account admins, but all of them had fairly major > >issues too. It's hard for me to recall any other major infrastructure > >team in Debian where I can point and say that they have always functioned > >fine, i.e. they only had technical issues (rather than manpower issues). > Many teams lack manpower, but there are several reasons for that. Often, > it's a real lack of manpower. In some cases, it can be that the team is > unable to accept help offers, but I suppose this is a minority of cases. > > I share Lucas's concern that the number of teams in the second case may > not be worth a GR. I recommend to start by finding at least two teams in > this case and trying investigate what happened to these teams.
I was a bit dazzled by what I read there, but then I went to check whether you had the opportunity to see the history I'm talking about. It appears that you aren't a DD, and a cursory Google search doesn't show activity from over three years ago. It would probably make a difference if you were able to see things from my point of view. -- 2. That which causes joy or happiness. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]