A suggestion: allow anyone to reopen bugs marked "no feedback". Also
allow anyone to switch a bug from "feedback" to "open".
I believe this idea has a great deal of merit, unless it has proven to
be subject to abuse in the past or something.
I agree with "no feedback", but not necessarily with
On Mon, July 23, 2007 10:43 am, Tim Starling wrote:
> A suggestion: allow anyone to reopen bugs marked "no feedback". Also
> allow anyone to switch a bug from "feedback" to "open".
I believe this idea has a great deal of merit, unless it has proven to
be subject to abuse in the past or something.
On Mon, 2007-07-23 at 16:43 +0100, Tim Starling wrote:
> A suggestion: allow anyone to reopen bugs marked "no feedback". Also
> allow anyone to switch a bug from "feedback" to "open".
You're free to add comments to those. Do that and send an email to the
person who requested feedback. There will b
On 23.07.2007 19:43, Tim Starling wrote:
There aren't even any relevant contact details
available to draw the attention of admins to the bug that needs reopening.
This is simply not true. Every time someone changes status of the report
(even with the canned reply) the system logs his email.
F
+1
David
Am 23.07.2007 um 17:43 schrieb Tim Starling:
A suggestion: allow anyone to reopen bugs marked "no feedback". Also
allow anyone to switch a bug from "feedback" to "open".
The PHP bug tracker could go a long way towards liberalisation.
Community involvement seems to be actively disc