Aurelien Jarno wrote:
> Ana Guerrero a écrit :
[...]
>>> * Membership ends 24 months after they're given, or after the latest
>>> participation in a vote arranged by the project's Secretary. Members
>>> may retire themselves earlier, of course.
>>>
>> No, please, voting should be voluntary.
>>
Don't the major world events this last week just put things like SSH
insecurities into perspective as being just not that big of a deal...
I hope that any DDs or other Debian contributers in Sichuan Province or Burma (I
guess the former is more likely), and their families, are safe and well.
I a
Jorgen Schaefer wrote:
> Helen Faulkner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> It seems to me that we are already in a situation where only the
>> people who are really interested in, or informed about, a
>> particular question are voting on it.
>
> And that's
Wouter Verhelst wrote:
[...]
> Put differently, here are a number of questions you should answer for
> this to have merit:
> * What should a non-DD contributor be doing before we consider him/her
> eligible to vote?
Well, presumably something that is equivalent (in effort? in some kind of
mea
Hi,
Kevin Mark wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 03, 2006 at 02:55:37AM -0400, Kevin Mark wrote:
>
> It just dawned upon me that it would be great to have unofficial votes
> by non-debian-developers as a way to gage the broader debian communites
> reponse to things. If debian is committed to its end users, a
Steve Langasek wrote:
> Well, a formal announcement of the BSP is pending; and the rule on BSPs
> is that the organizer gets to pick where it happens, so it's not too
> late to move that to OFTC if it's agreed that's a better option.
>
It seems this has been done. The Debian Women bugsquashing
Simon Richter wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Helen Faulkner wrote:
>
>> 1) [...] #debian-women-new on oftc [...]
>
>
>> 3) [...] #debian-bugs channel on freenode [...]
>
>
> Is it really a good idea to have these on separate networks? I think
> that some one the &
(Apologies to those who receive this multiple times - I wanted it to reach a
wide audience. Replies only to -project please, unless there is something
specific to another list that is more appropriate to discuss there.)
Hi everyone,
The Debian Women project is celebrating Software Freedom Day [1
Marc Haber wrote:
On Wed, Mar 16, 2005 at 01:44:45PM +0100, Adrian von Bidder wrote:
[...]
I haven't looked at any earlier IRC DPL candidate debates, so I can't
compare if this was better or worse.
Earler debates may have been "easier" due to the lower number of
participants.
I strongly suspect th
Hi All,
Having just run the 2005 DPL IRC debate (and a stressful experience it
was too), Martin Krafft and I would like to get feedback on what people
thought of the debate and how it was run.
Suggestions for future debates will be very welcome, not that I am
planning to volunteer to do that again
David Moreno Garza wrote:
On Fri, 2005-03-04 at 15:37 +0100, martin f krafft wrote:
[...]
This year's DPL debate will take place on Saturday, 19 March 2005,
at 23:00 UTC[0]. It will last for two hours. The meeting will take
place on the Freenode IRC network[1], using two channels:
Won't there be a
Matthew Garrett wrote:
Last year, the DPL asked me to look into writing descriptions of what
various teams in Debian were responsible for, and what their day to day
activity involved. I performed some interviews at the time, and then
promptly failed to get around to writing them up. The current dis
Glenn Maynard wrote:
On Sun, Jan 30, 2005 at 07:27:26PM +, Helen Faulkner wrote:
Ugh. English has no gender-neutral third person singular pronoun, which
means that the use of "he" and "his" for an unspecific third party assumes
nothing about his gender.
Well, actual
Martin Michlmayr wrote:
Marc 'HE' Brockschmidt and Brian Nelson have recently joined the Front
Desk. I'm currently giving them some training and I have also written
documentation on the activities of the Front Desk. The documentation
is available from http://svn.debian.org/wsvn/nm/trunk/doc/ It'
Floris Bruynooghe wrote:
I'd prefer to make this a polite "no" as well. I don't think debian
should have any adds, let alone some that can't be controlled at all.
Futermore it would create lots of trouble. Just think about the
number of emails of random people we get on -project about totally
From: Craig Sanders
meekness isn't about bullying.
it's (partially) about perceiving bullying whether it's really there or not.
it is a disability which varies in severity from being mildly shy to being
socially crippled..it is not the fault, or responsibility, of non-meek
people, any more t
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