Hi misc,
I was following with a bit of amusement recent thread
https://marc.info/?t=15629982761&r=1&w=2
as a signal-to-noise ratio is typically higher on misc@openbsd than most
non-developer mailing lists I am subscribed to.
At some point it occurred to me that Eric Faurot was working on
> There was an info from sasha@ at a Czech IT website about n2k16
> mini-hackathon and subsequent public discussion in Prague, Czech
> Republic in July 2016.
>
> I'm just curious, who does help OpenBSD project to organize this
> hackathon? Oracle, Praguer Charles Univ
There was an info from sasha@ at a Czech IT website about n2k16
mini-hackathon and subsequent public discussion in Prague, Czech
Republic in July 2016.
I'm just curious, who does help OpenBSD project to organize this
hackathon? Oracle, Praguer Charles University...?
j.
On 07/24/13 08:32, MERIGHI Marcus wrote:
cyber-attack
cyber espionage
cyber attack
cyber war games
cyber warriors
Cyber 9/12
Cyber Storm
cyber preparedness
cyber scenario
Cyber Storm
cyber threat
cyber attacks
Right now, there are a lot of drunk college students out there.
--
Scott McE
I learned about this via
http://www.infosecnews.org/subscribe-to-infosec-news/
Thread 'term "hackathon" trademarked in Germany':
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=136766877107167
Bye, Marcus
- Forwarded from InfoSec News
Date: Wed, 24 Jul 2013 07:29:07 + (UTC
Written by Joshua Stein:
http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20130608064453&mode=expanded&count=0
More reports here:
http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=front&mode=expanded
--
staticsafe
O< ascii ribbon campaign - stop html mail - www.asciiribbon.org
Please don't top post.
Please don't CC! I'm
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 7:19 PM, Patrick Mc(avery
wrote:
> I just joined the list 10 days ago or so. Where and when in Toronto will it
> be held?
There may be some confusion about what is meant by "hackathon". Read
http://www.openbsd.org/hackathons.html
for background.
Philip Guenther
Hi Everyone
I just joined the list 10 days ago or so. Where and when in Toronto will
it be held?
My family situation is quite urgent and it's hard to be away from home
for more then 30 minutes but it would be nice to be involved in some
way, I am 30 minutes north of the city.
-Patrick
osity, what is the focus of this hackathon? I don't know what
> >>"t2k13" means.
> >t == toronto
> >
> >2k == 2000
> >
> >13 == 13
> >
>
> Sorry for not being clear. I understood the "2k13" part, it was the
> "t"
On 05/29/13 20:22, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 07:54:39PM -0400, Scott McEachern wrote:
Have fun, and thanks for the work you're putting in. Just out of
curiosity, what is the focus of this hackathon? I don't know what
"t2k13" means.
t == toronto
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 5:22 PM, Kenneth R Westerback
wrote:
> 13 == 13
To clarify:
13 == rot13(rot13(13))
Philip
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 07:54:39PM -0400, Scott McEachern wrote:
> As a person who was born and raised in Toronto, and currently lives
> a bit outside of the city, I wanted to extend a warm welcome to our
> OpenBSD hackathon guests!
>
> I hope the major storm that happened la
As a person who was born and raised in Toronto, and currently lives a
bit outside of the city, I wanted to extend a warm welcome to our
OpenBSD hackathon guests!
I hope the major storm that happened last night, which caused some
flooding complicating commutes, didn't inconvenience yo
Hi Peter,
it looks like the problem with the usage of "Hackathon is solved".
>From their own site: http://www.young-targets.com/free-licences/
#
Why?
Because we did not first founded the nonprofit organization “Tech_Hub”
that will manage the revenue for the free tech sce
There is a new update.
"The attempt to take revenue for non-commercial purposes on a licensing
model failed.
[...] we will delete the trademark "hackathon"".
http://www.young-targets.com/free-licences/
On Tue, May 07, 2013 at 10:49:27PM +0200, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
A bit late to the party, but here's my take on the situation -
http://bsdly.blogspot.ca/2013/05/the-term-hackathon-has-been-trademarked.html
- Peter
--
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.bsdly.net/ http://www.nu
On 2013-05-04, Robert wrote:
> OT, but some people might be interested in this legal stuff...
>
> It seems that a nonprofit organization in Germany trademarked the term
> "hackathon":
>
> https://www.facebook.com/nicole.simon/posts/10151640773611303?_fb_noscript=1
&g
OT, but some people might be interested in this legal stuff...
It seems that a nonprofit organization in Germany trademarked the term
"hackathon":
https://www.facebook.com/nicole.simon/posts/10151640773611303?_fb_noscript=1
http://www.young-targets.com/formation-of-tech_hub-started/
>
> I hope that this helps. If you need more help, please post a question to
> "misc@" as this the kind of question that should be asked there.
>
> Happy holidays!
>
> Best regards,
>
> Mark
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> *From: *Cani Miroslav
>
... I think it deserve at least an undeadly article ;)
Thanks guys!
--
Massimo
I wanted to make a correction here as I got a comment that puzzled me
and that may have created a miss understanding on my part on the way I
wrote my text.
If the perception have been taken by anyone as a complain, or otherwise
I want to apologies for this!
It's possible that some may have t
> Is there a particular time of day most changes are committed (like
> pre-dinner) or should we sync and build at whim?
Oh come on.
We are being careful. The tree builds -- always. Only one commit done
so far has broken something so far -- for about 3 minutes -- which none
of you noticed.
Theo de Raadt wrote:
Development is really fast right now, because of the hackathon in Edmonton.
We are testing as much as we can before we commit, but as always
during these hackathon processes we really depend on our user
community -- to track our changes and help spot the occasional bug we
d beer o'clock (between 11pm and
1am, TZ=Canada/Mountain).
At any rate, we try to keep things production-stable even during a
hackathon: our productivity during the event depends on it, so you can
sync and build pretty much anytime. If you run into problems check the
most recent commit messages
Is there a particular time of day most changes are committed (like
pre-dinner) or should we sync and build at whim?
On 6/10/08, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Development is really fast right now, because of the hackathon in Edmonton.
>
> We are testing as much as w
about it all.
p.s. love the shirt.
On 10-Jun-08, at 10:17 PM, Theo de Raadt wrote:
Development is really fast right now, because of the hackathon in
Edmonton.
We are testing as much as we can before we commit, but as always
during these hackathon processes we really depend on our user
Development is really fast right now, because of the hackathon in Edmonton.
We are testing as much as we can before we commit, but as always
during these hackathon processes we really depend on our user
community -- to track our changes and help spot the occasional bug we
accidentally introduce
commit logs have already figured out that
> > > > most of the network developers are currently involved in a week-long
> > > > network hackathon in Japan.
> > > >
> > > > A bit more information about this can be found at
> > >
y vanhegan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080508 22:07]:
>> > On 8 May 2008, at 20:24, Theo de Raadt wrote:
>> >
>> > > Perhaps some who watch the commit logs have already figured out that
>> > > most of the network developers are currently involved in a wee
s are currently involved in a week-long
> > > network hackathon in Japan.
> > >
> > > A bit more information about this can be found at
> > > http://openbsd.org/hackathons.html#n2k8
> >
> > Any pictures of the festivities online?
> >
> > Gab
* Gaby vanhegan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080508 22:07]:
> On 8 May 2008, at 20:24, Theo de Raadt wrote:
>
> > Perhaps some who watch the commit logs have already figured out that
> > most of the network developers are currently involved in a week-long
> > network hac
On 5/8/08, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Perhaps some who watch the commit logs have already figured out that
> most of the network developers are currently involved in a week-long
> network hackathon in Japan.
It's a dream of mine to be apart of one of these. aw
On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 2:24 AM, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Perhaps some who watch the commit logs have already figured out that
> most of the network developers are currently involved in a week-long
> network hackathon in Japan.
>
> A bit more information about
On 8 May 2008, at 20:24, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> Perhaps some who watch the commit logs have already figured out that
> most of the network developers are currently involved in a week-long
> network hackathon in Japan.
>
> A bit more information about this can be found at
>
Perhaps some who watch the commit logs have already figured out that
most of the network developers are currently involved in a week-long
network hackathon in Japan.
A bit more information about this can be found at
http://openbsd.org/hackathons.html#n2k8
We are in a rather old hotel with an
On Sat, 02 Jun 2007 16:40:49 -0600
Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hope you guys out there enjoy the changes that we've made.
You can't imagine how much i enjoyed reading through commit logs.
Amazing. Thank you!
--
Massimo.run();
: is not an identifier
On Sat, Jun 02, 2007 at 04:05:27PM -0700, Darren Spruell wrote:
> On 6/2/07, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
> >event for 10 days in Calgary.
> >
> >So many projects were sta
On Sun, 3 Jun 2007, Reyk Floeter wrote:
i mostly concentrated on writing 10g drivers, bits on
hoststated, and doing performance testing.
reyk
YEA, thank you very much for your 10g work, looking forward to removing
FreeBSD from a couple of systems at my day job.
g.day
On 6/2/07, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
event for 10 days in Calgary.
So many projects were started or finished, it is basically impossible
for me to describe all the projects.
Hope you guys out there enj
hi!
thanks theo for making it possible and thanks to all the people
supporting OpenBSD with donations and buying the cds!
On Sat, Jun 02, 2007 at 04:40:49PM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
> event for 10 days in Calgary.
&
On 6/2/07, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
event for 10 days in Calgary.
So many projects were started or finished, it is basically impossible
for me to describe all the projects.
Hope you guys out there enj
On 6/2/07, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
event for 10 days in Calgary.
So many projects were started or finished, it is basically impossible
for me to describe all the projects.
I elect merdely to fill in a
On Sat, 2 Jun 2007, Theo de Raadt wrote:
The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
event for 10 days in Calgary.
So many projects were started or finished, it is basically impossible
for me to describe all the projects.
Hope you guys out there enjoy the changes that
On Sat, Jun 02, 2007 at 04:40:49PM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> So many projects were started or finished, it is basically impossible
> for me to describe all the projects.
>
> Hope you guys out there enjoy the changes that we've made.
I've not been a member of the community for very long: 3-4
Theo de Raadt wrote:
The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
event for 10 days in Calgary.
So many projects were started or finished, it is basically impossible
for me to describe all the projects.
Hope you guys out there enjoy the changes that we've
The c2k7 hackathon is over, with roughly 50 developers attending the
event for 10 days in Calgary.
So many projects were started or finished, it is basically impossible
for me to describe all the projects.
Hope you guys out there enjoy the changes that we've made.
>If someone in Calgary has a spare 1000-2000VA UPS which we could
>borrow for the duration of the hackathon, we would really appreciate
>it. We would need it starting today.
>
>Thanks.
>
>
Fixed.
If someone in Calgary has a spare 1000-2000VA UPS which we could
borrow for the duration of the hackathon, we would really appreciate
it. We would need it starting today.
Thanks.
s like you do...
Keep up the good work...
Bryan
On 5/21/07, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 21 May 2007, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> SNIP
> > time for the hackathon. In the meantime, we will try to work with our
> > CX4 units (that is copper 10GE, really we
> On Mon, 21 May 2007, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> SNIP
> > time for the hackathon. In the meantime, we will try to work with our
> > CX4 units (that is copper 10GE, really weird stuff).
> SNIP
> > At some point we will also need one of the LR optic units as well ;)
>
On Mon, 21 May 2007, Theo de Raadt wrote:
SNIP
time for the hackathon. In the meantime, we will try to work with our
CX4 units (that is copper 10GE, really weird stuff).
SNIP
At some point we will also need one of the LR optic units as well ;)
now that's an extreme, from CX4 Cu to LR o
bag trying
> to Google for it.
The actual unit is the J8436A. It looks like someone has in fact
bought one for us, and now HP Procurve is going through the procedures
of trying to donate one as well. We hope that these units arrive in
time for the hackathon. In the meantime, we will try to work
On May 20, 2007, at 5:02 PM, Darrin Chandler wrote:
On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 01:15:58PM -0600, Jack Woehr wrote:
Theo de Raadt wrote:
A HP XFP SR-optic 10GE module for a HP 3500yl switch which
already has
the 10Gb card installed. If anyone can help us with getting this to
us, we'd love it.
Y
On 2007/05/20 17:02, Darrin Chandler wrote:
> On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 01:15:58PM -0600, Jack Woehr wrote:
> > Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > >A HP XFP SR-optic 10GE module for a HP 3500yl switch which already has
> > >the 10Gb card installed. If anyone can help us with getting this to
> > >us, we'd love
On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 01:15:58PM -0600, Jack Woehr wrote:
> Theo de Raadt wrote:
> >A HP XFP SR-optic 10GE module for a HP 3500yl switch which already has
> >the 10Gb card installed. If anyone can help us with getting this to
> >us, we'd love it.
> >
> >Yes, we know they are very expensive. Bruta
Theo de Raadt wrote:
> One very important part of the hackathon sub-project will be to
> improve 10Gb support. Some of us believe that measuring the
> performance of 10Gb networking later will help us spot some
> performance problems that can improve 1Gb ethernet speed.
As a s
Theo de Raadt wrote:
A HP XFP SR-optic 10GE module for a HP 3500yl switch which already has
the 10Gb card installed. If anyone can help us with getting this to
us, we'd love it.
Yes, we know they are very expensive. Brutal, in fact.
Hmm, $2,822.97 at http://keenzo.com/showproduct.asp?id=741395
The hackathon is coming up in a week.
One very important part of the hackathon sub-project will be to
improve 10Gb support. Some of us believe that measuring the
performance of 10Gb networking later will help us spot some
performance problems that can improve 1Gb ethernet speed.
There is one
On 5/11/07, Mark Kettenis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On this years hackathon I'd like to hack more on macppc smp support.
> For obvious reasons I cannot bring my own machine. Is there anyone in
> the Calgary or Edmonton area that can loan us a dual g4 machine end
>
How about a dual G5? PowerMac Dual G5 7,3 2.2 Open Firmware 4.
I don't follow Apple hardware, so I don't know what the difference
between a G4 and a G5 is architecture wise; but I do know that OS/X has
to come off of this thing with a quickness. ~BAS
On Fri, 2007-05-11 at 20:31 +0200, Mark Kette
On this years hackathon I'd like to hack more on macppc smp support.
For obvious reasons I cannot bring my own machine. Is there anyone in
the Calgary or Edmonton area that can loan us a dual g4 machine end
may/early june?
Mark
The annual Calgary hackathon is coming up in a bit less than a month.
As usual, this is a good time to remind people that developers need
toys that they can fix/support, so maybe everyone can take a peek at
http://www.openbsd.org/want.html
and see if there is anything they should send to
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Nikolay Sturm wrote:
> - 8 250G SATA disks
I was able to convince Dalco, a Swiss company, to loan those 8 disks to
the hackathon. I'll get in touch with you privately so we can sort out
the details.
Cheers,
- --
Stephan A.
On Tue, Feb 27, 2007 at 01:29:32PM -0600, Travers Buda wrote:
> Jeez, I sense some hostility on [EMAIL PROTECTED] Andreas, It's a nice
> effort,
> but unfortunately, it won't support the goals of f2k7. The most
> important lacking thing for the hackathon is fast, memory-
Jeez, I sense some hostility on [EMAIL PROTECTED] Andreas, It's a nice effort,
but unfortunately, it won't support the goals of f2k7. The most
important lacking thing for the hackathon is fast, memory-packed
machines, and lots of disks. AKA, modern expensive, top of the
line stuff. I
> It was just targeted at THIS particular issue and the future ideas to
> continue making OpenBSD (development) better/more fun.
>
And by detracting from the important issue which is:
* We need gear in europe for f2k7 *
You manage to sidetrack something important with your hack.
So in do
On Tue, Feb 27, 2007 at 06:48:03PM +0100, Martin Reindl wrote:
> f2k7 is not in 2 weeks but from 10th to 15th April and this still does
> not help with DISKSPACE and SERVERS to plug them in.
Well, April, not March, doh!
Okay so there will be some more time to make this work :)
But to quote from
f2k7 is not in 2 weeks but from 10th to 15th April and this still does
not help with DISKSPACE and SERVERS to plug them in.
ation to bsd.port.mk and possibly
other parts of the tree. But since I read about the upcoming hackathon
and call for fast machines (I know they are still needed) I'm sending
this now. This gives people some time to this out (and improve it) in
advance to the hackathon.
The security problems
* Nikolay Sturm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-02-26 16:20]:
> * Nikolay Sturm [2007-02-26]:
> > unfortunately the first call for hardware donations wasn't really that
> > successful, we got a few interesting pieces of hardware, but we are
> > still lacking major parts. So here's the second call for don
* Nikolay Sturm [2007-02-26]:
> unfortunately the first call for hardware donations wasn't really that
> successful, we got a few interesting pieces of hardware, but we are
> still lacking major parts. So here's the second call for donations.
It looks like I messed up the words, all we are asking
Hi,
unfortunately the first call for hardware donations wasn't really that
successful, we got a few interesting pieces of hardware, but we are
still lacking major parts. So here's the second call for donations.
In order to have a successful event we need the following pieces of
hardware:
- 2 fast
On 16/01/2007, at 5:07 PM, Nikolay Sturm wrote:
the next OpenBSD Mini Hackathon will be the Filesystem Hackathon
- hardware to build a raid with 2 or more TB
Wow, this sounds really exciting.
Shane J Pearson
shanejp netspace net au
Hi there,
the next OpenBSD Mini Hackathon will be the Filesystem Hackathon, taking
place in april in Vienna. For this event we are looking for some fast
build machines and lots of harddisks as a loan (donations welcome, of
course :).
We need
- several fast build machines with at least two
I can't stress enough the importance of the ports hackathon.
The current ports infrastructure changes come directly from
some discussions we had during that week.
The idea of streamlining MULTI_PACKAGES was completely non existent
before Budapest. Maybe I would have thought about it at
http://bofh.ucs.ualberta.ca/beck/pictures/c2k6 has my full set.
-Bob
* Kroty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-06-15 04:30]:
> Hey folk,
>
> anyone willing to share some pics from this year's hackathon?
>
> I just have seen a couple of them
Hey folk,
anyone willing to share some pics from this year's hackathon?
I just have seen a couple of them from beck. ;)
Thanks!
Just wanted to take a minute to wish all devs present to the 2006
Hackathon in Calgary a nice time and on behalf of the users a thank you
for your time and dedications to the improvement of our beloved OS!
I don't know what surprise this year Hackathon will bring, but as each
years, I
On Friday 11 November 2005 21:49, Peter Valchev wrote:
[...]
> The week was a total success, see you there next year!
Where?? :)
--
FabioFVZ
This year, OpenCON hosted a mini hackathon with focus on ports. It
consisted of 4 days right before the conference, and a dozen
OpenBSD developers were present, most of them arriving on October 31st
to spend the next 4-5 days working together on improving the system.
Some of us had never met
[EMAIL PROTECTED] dixit:
>Yes you're right but a "OpenHTTPD" with "OpenMOD_GZIP" and maybe IPv6 is
>still missing. And maybe a OpenSQUID... :-)))
>Just jokingoO(But httpD improvements would be realy cool. :) )
$ uname -a
OpenBSD jiyu.gnook.org 3.7 GENERIC#97 i386
Doing a $ cvs -qz1 -d [EMAIL
On 2005-05-03, at 2:12 PM, Sean Brown wrote:
be more to your liking? OpenOpenWall perhaps? OpenLinux?
^
Careful. A very vomit worthy company has a trademark on that one...
http://ir.sco.com/ReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=70727
Although, maybe not
On Monday, May 2, Sean Brown wrote:
>
> Is that for the stupid Open* suggestion or the fact it was Bash? Would
> OpenKDE be more to your liking? OpenOpenWall perhaps? OpenLinux?
Uuuggghhh!!!
Ok, I just want to drink beer and hack. The rest will take care
of itself.
--Toby.
> > > I'm looking forward to OpenBash
> >
> > Why do you want every OpenBSD developer to puke?
> >
> > Miod
> Is that for the stupid Open* suggestion or the fact it was Bash?
The latter.
Miod
On May 1, 2005 3:31 pm, Miod Vallat wrote:
> > I'm looking forward to OpenBash
>
> Why do you want every OpenBSD developer to puke?
>
> Miod
Is that for the stupid Open* suggestion or the fact it was Bash? Would OpenKDE
be more to your liking? OpenOpenWall perhaps? OpenLinux?
Steve Shockley wrote:
Sean Brown wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
If you keep saying things like that, Theo's going to change the default
shell back to csh.
what is this attraction to csh anyway?
cheers,
kim
--
Kim Hawtin : IT Systems Administrator
Ratbag : Level 8 - 63 Pirie Street Adelaide
Sean Brown wrote:
> I'm looking forward to OpenBash
Do you realize that on my only Linux machine I don't even have
bash installed. I replaced /bin/sh with ash and I use zsh for my
shell.
bash for Linux is like Internet Explorer for windows. It comes
preinstalled so everyone uses it and doesn't bo
> Sean Brown wrote:
>>I'm looking forward to OpenBash
>
> They already have it, it's called ksh.
Yes you're right but a "OpenHTTPD" with "OpenMOD_GZIP" and maybe IPv6 is
still missing. And maybe a OpenSQUID... :-)))
Just jokingoO(But httpD improvements would be realy cool. :) )
Kind regards,
Sean Brown wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
They already have it, it's called ksh.
_
Take charge with a pop-up guard built on patented Microsoft. SmartScreen
Technology.
http://join.msn.com/?pgmarket=en-ca&page=byoa/prem&xAPID=
Thierry Deval wrote:
On May 1, 2005, at 23:31, Miod Vallat wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
I think they should write the ultimate virus! Take out Windows completely!
Think of it!; it would be the big bang all over again!
Alternately, I could live with mount_smbfs
(puts on flame retardant su
Sean Brown wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
If you keep saying things like that, Theo's going to change the default
shell back to csh.
On May 1, 2005, at 23:31, Miod Vallat wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
Why do you want every OpenBSD developer to puke?
Jeez, I didn't read that !
And it is indeed MY feeling. :p
> I'm looking forward to OpenBash
>
Why do you want every OpenBSD developer to puke?
Miod
On May 1, 2005 2:11 pm, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Sun, 1 May 2005, Ben Goren wrote:
> > I did *not* say that I expected a Sendmail replacement any time
> > soon--quite the opposite. Let me put a definite limit on this: I'd bet
> > no more than (a modest) lunch, and only on the condition that I alre
Sorry If I didn't read to well, but when exactly is the hackaton planned?
I always like to have my personal hackaton at the same time and I
always watch every CVS commit.
Wijnand
On Sun, 1 May 2005, Ben Goren wrote:
> I did *not* say that I expected a Sendmail replacement any time
> soon--quite the opposite. Let me put a definite limit on this: I'd bet
> no more than (a modest) lunch, and only on the condition that I already
> happened to be in the same city when the be
On 2005 Apr 30, at 5:22 PM, Jeff Bachtel wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 30, 2005 at 02:30:28PM -0700, Ben Goren wrote:
>> As much as I'm sure Theo would love to get rid of gcc and
>> friends...damn, that's a big undertaking. I don't think it's the sort
>> of thing t
A few promissing tasks indeed,
What ever endeavours you may embark on during the Hackathon, I hope
you find a nice beer buzz and as Jan Izary put it;
> Beyond that we can hope that someone has
> a moment of clarity and comes up with
> another sweet addition like spamd.
> If I
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
:) Hah.
On Sat, 30 Apr 2005 20:12:39 -0700 Raymond Lillard
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Dear auto...
>
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA1
>>
>> Theo,
>>
>> Perhaps your a bit "ininformed" yourself.. unless the
ords fail to express correctly.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Hackathon 2005
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