Actually FileZilla and Deluge are great candidates for backports and
just need a bug filed against the appropriate backports project. There
was some discussion at UDS about increasing the usage of backports for
these types of applications so people can get the latest versions.
Thanks,
Micah
On 1
Assalam alaikum Usama,
The average user (i.e the group of users we're targeting) doesn't care
about what version of software X he is running, as long as it works.
For that reason, new versions of software will not land in the Ubuntu
main repositories. Furthermore, these new versions can also not la
Wa alaikum alsalam,
Bilal this is different from backports. for example Filezilla and Deluge
have no problem have more recent release on windows than Linux. You
already trust the developers of such applications. Why not help them
reach the users directly under your supervision as Ubuntu.
You might
It's no secret that this idea sprung from (possibly the lack-of) a
Steam-like service. Though it makes sense for Steam to include all
steam-community features in one software package, I don't see how this
couldn't be extended to the software-center too. I think that Ubuntu-one,
and possibly empathy
That is a good point, I think though if we provide a strong template and
keep everything consistent and logical it should be ok. I'd imagine only
package maintainers could alter the package page to enforce this.
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 12:51 PM, Kip Warner wrote:
> On Fri, 2010-10-29 at 14:25 -0
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Hash: SHA1
Am 29.10.2010 21:25, schrieb Chris Hardee:
> It's probably been talked about before, but as proposed here:
> https://wiki.ubuntu.com/GamesIntegration
>
> I think we need add ogv/movie support in software-center to show
> off games and some application
On Fri, 2010-10-29 at 14:25 -0500, Chris Hardee wrote:
> It's probably been talked about before, but as proposed here:
> https://wiki.ubuntu.com/GamesIntegration
>
> I think we need add ogv/movie support in software-center to
> show off games
> and s