On Mon, 2005-11-07 at 14:02 -0500, Daniel Ostrow wrote: > [snip] > > > After going through the list, I got the impression there is simply no > > place where such messages clearly would go. gentoo-announce sounds as > > the best option to go for, but its description somehow suggests not. > > Though, subscribed to gentoo-announce means you get nothing but GLSA > > announcements and sometimes a new release announcements. > > > > So, what list should the user that wants to receive those **important** > > messages sign up to? > > I still think that *this* is the reason why people don't seem to know > > about the important changes, because there is no obvious place where to > > get them. It's quite likely that a user that wanted to see the > > new-style apache message didn't see it because it simply didn't appear > > on a list the user hoped to see it. It was in the GWN of 2005-09-12, > > but I can imagine a user didn't expect it to be there, as there is no > > description at al for GWN list, and the **important** information will > > always have to be extracted from the GWN, since each GWN covers multiple > > items in a few categories which not every user might interest. > > > > Send **important** messages separate to a non-discussion mailing list, > > and I'm sure that many people will be happy to read it -- just like > > gentoo-announce. > > [/snip] > > Above and beyond Ciaran's point... > > You are correct, there is no clear cut place for them to go...that's how > this thing got started in the first place. However why force users to > sign up for something which can't be appropriately filtered (installed > packages, keywords, use flags, profiles, etc.) when all of them are > already "signed up" for something that can track and filter, portage. > > I wouldn't necessarily bother signing up for an errata list if said list > was going to provide me with *all* the errata out there. The reason that > a mailing list works for RedHat is because RHN tracks what packages you > have installed on your system on *their* server (again something you > have to sign up for, and worse send them info about your configuration), > so the filtering is done for you. We will *never* do something like > this, we have a client side tool that can identify what is installed > already...why not use it?
Err...sorry for the double post...mail client error. Oh...and before anyone goes nuts...note I said "why force users to sign up" to such a list *not* "we will not provide such a list". -- Daniel Ostrow Gentoo Foundation Board of Trustees Gentoo/{PPC,PPC64,DevRel} [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list