On Vi, 06 aug 10, 12:36:17, Jeremiah Mahler wrote: > Patrick, > > On Fri, Aug 6, 2010 at 6:29 AM, Patrick Ouellette <p...@flying-gecko.net> > wrote: > > I think you may be missing the poing a bit. A 'TODO' list is nice, > > but what is stopping YOU from forwarding the information to upstream > > or checking the upstream project to see if they know about the issue? > > > > What was stopping me was the assumption that forwarding bugs could > only be done by a maintainer. But it makes sense that there is no reason > why I could not discuss these bugs with the upstream authors and report back. Bugs can be manipulated by anyone, not just the maintainer.
> > What SPECIFIC package(s) in the list do YOU use, and what SPECIFIC > > issues are YOU having? > > > > I'm not saying all the bugs don't need to be addressed, but it is a > > lot easier to motivate people when someone has a specific need rather > > than picking a developer's package set and complaining about every one > > of the packages with a bug report. > > > > I should focus my efforts on a micro rather than a macro level. > > > Again I ask YOU what efforts have YOU made to contact the maintainer? > > I have not attempted to contact the maintainer in any way other than through > bug reports. And the bug reports as well as these messages are sent to the > email for the maintainer. Is there some other method I should use? Your "quest" seems directed towards a particular Maintainer. My guess is you are probably more familiar with the packages on you own machine. Try rc-alert and/or wnpp-alert (finding the package containing these is left as an exercise to the potential contributor). Regards, Andrei -- Offtopic discussions among Debian users and developers: http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/d-community-offtopic
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