On Sun, 2005-11-13 at 22:34 +0000, Stuart Herbert wrote: > On Sat, 2005-11-12 at 10:26 -0500, Chris Gianelloni wrote: > > If users are interested in non-critical information, there's already a > > mechanism in place for them to get such things. They can join the > > mailing lists. Do we not already have a gentoo-events list? We also > > have a gentoo-releng list, or gentoo-announce. > > At this point, I think you're suggesting that we different news carried > by different mediums. If so, I think that's very different from the > proposal I'm putting forward.
I thought your proposal was to get critical information to our users, not force every user to read that $dev is going to be in $country from $date1 to $date2. As I understood it, the portage-delivered news would be 100% tree-related and not filled with nonsense. If I am mistaken in this, then I change my opinion on supporting this proposal, as I surely don't give a damn about some dev meet in the UK that I would never be able to attend and *definitely* don't want that *shoved* down my throat by the tree. I also noticed how you lost context in my quote by the way you quoted it. Thanks. > > > I'm not hoping for a 100% perfect technical solution straight away. > > > > I am. Anything less at this point is a half-assed design. The *design* > > should be 100% from the start. While implementation can occur in > > stages, you should not design as you go. > > I think that's a worthy goal, but looking around, it looks to me that > software design just doesn't work like that in real life. Designs have > to adapt and change as time passes, not just implementations. Really? I work with quite a few developers where I work. We have meetings. During these meetings, requirements are hashed out to cover the scope of the project. The code is then written to the specifications. If a later change is made into the requirements, then another meeting takes place, and a change request is agreed upon and scheduled. They sure as hell don't let the requirements slip otherwise, or they would end up in the ever-developing and never-completing world. We're talking about a *very* simple set of things that need to be developed here. Why *would* we even consider not laying out the requirements up front? -- Chris Gianelloni Release Engineering - Strategic Lead x86 Architecture Team Games - Developer Gentoo Linux
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