"Loyall, David" writes:
> FWIW, I believe that the org-mode community should do what we can to
> oblige Jambunathan's request, even if/when we're not legally required
> to do so. I think that we should do the same for any human who wants
> to withdraw from an endeavor. (Don't each of you feel
"Loyall, David" writes:
> the org-mode community should do what we can to oblige Jambunathan's
> request, even if/when we're not legally required to do so.
I read you, but no, not in this case.
> (Don't each of you feel that your code is a part of you?)
Yes, of course. However, when I put my
Scott Randby writes:
> There is one individual who is poisoning the atmosphere by engaging in
> unfair and unfounded name calling that simply should not be included
> in messages to this list.
The Internet wisdom (I mean, years of accumulated experience by lots of
people) suggests that we comple
orgmode-bounces+david.loyall=nebraska@gnu.org
[mailto:emacs-orgmode-bounces+david.loyall=nebraska@gnu.org] On Behalf Of
Scott Randby
Sent: Sunday, March 10, 2013 12:02 PM
To: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
Subject: [O] Org Community
Last September, I attended a talk given by the lead developers of a
Thank you for writing that, Scott.
On 3/10/13, Scott Randby wrote:
> Last September, I attended a talk given by the lead developers of a
> prominent free software project. One of the developers spoke about the
> importance of maintaining a friendly community that does not drive
> people away. In
March, 10 at 13:01 Scott Randby wrote:
> However, I am concerned about the future of org. There is one
> individual who is poisoning the atmosphere by engaging in unfair and
> unfounded name calling that simply should not be included in messages
> to this list.
I think we should ignore him. I hav
Scott Randby gmail.com> writes:
> However, I am concerned about the future of org. There is one
> individual who is poisoning the atmosphere by engaging in unfair and
> unfounded name calling that simply should not be included in messages
> to this list. Now this person wants to take some of thei
Last September, I attended a talk given by the lead developers of a
prominent free software project. One of the developers spoke about the
importance of maintaining a friendly community that does not drive
people away. In particular, the developer emphasized that the
community is more important tha