On Thu, 14 Feb 2019, Ian Jackson wrote:
> Firstly, thanks for taking the time to read what I wrote. (Thanks
> also for Sam for his helpful perspective.)
>
>
> Stepping back a bit, and firmly putting my `user' hat on:
>
> My aim was to share my experience, because I guess the point of
> jessie-
Hi!
On Thu, 2019-02-14 at 17:36:31 -0500, Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote:
> Package: wnpp
> Severity: wishlist
> Owner: Daniel Kahn Gillmor
>
> * Package name: socket-activate
> Version : 0.1
> Upstream Author : Daniel Kahn Gillmor
> * URL : https://gitlab.com/dkg/socket-a
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: who-biz
Package name: Blur Network GUI Wallet
Version : 0.1.8.3
Upstream Author : The Blur Network
URL : https://www.blur.cash
License : BSD
Programming Lang: Qt, C++
Description : A graphical frontend to t
The following is a listing of packages for which help has been requested
through the WNPP (Work-Needing and Prospective Packages) system in the
last week.
Total number of orphaned packages: 1392 (new: 5)
Total number of packages offered up for adoption: 158 (new: 2)
Total number of packages reques
Hi,
Here's a few extra of my cents (buy yourself some ice cream from it).
I'm not going to touch the subject of why packages should or should not
be removed in particular cases, but I'd like to add some feedback from a
point of view of another user who wants to end up with the same result,
Jessie
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Daniel Kahn Gillmor
* Package name: socket-activate
Version : 0.1
Upstream Author : Daniel Kahn Gillmor
* URL : https://gitlab.com/dkg/socket-activate
* License : GPL
Programming Lang: Python
Description : Run a s
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Antoine Beaupre
* Package name: convertdate
Version : 2.1.3
Upstream Author : Neil Freeman
* URL : https://github.com/fitnr/convertdate/
* License : MIT/Expat?
Programming Lang: Python
Description : Converts betwe
Firstly, thanks for taking the time to read what I wrote. (Thanks
also for Sam for his helpful perspective.)
Stepping back a bit, and firmly putting my `user' hat on:
My aim was to share my experience, because I guess the point of
jessie-backports (and of much of what we do in Debian) is to hel
> "Rhonda" == Rhonda D'Vine writes:
>> installer image to have the jessie-backports kernel and modules,
>> but that is not relevant to this tale.)
Rhonda> I don't really follow - you now can get rid of that special
Rhonda> casing (which had to be added specifically) and red
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: "W. Martin Borgert"
* Package name: social-examples
Version : n/a
Upstream Author : Matías Aguirre
* URL : https://github.com/python-social-auth/social-examples
* License : BSD-3
Programming Lang: Python
Description
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: "W. Martin Borgert"
* Package name: social-app-webpy
Version : 1.0.0
Upstream Author : Matías Aguirre
* URL : https://pypi.python.org/pypi/social-auth-app-django
* License : BSD-3
Programming Lang: Python
Description
Hi,
On 2/13/19 1:09 PM, Ian Jackson wrote:
> I would like to recount a situation. I'm not sure where, if anywhere,
> the root bug(s) lie, but I am inclined to say that a big part of the
> problem was a change to the contents of jessie-backports. I would be
> interested to hear what the backp
On February 13, 2019 4:07:45 PM UTC, Ansgar wrote:
>More importantly Jessie has reached end-of-life[1]. Please do not
>expect related suites (such as -security, -backports, -proposed-
>updates, -updates) to continue working after this.
-security and -updates are part of the LTS sources.list o
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