On 14 March 2010 21:21, Daniel Bell wrote:
> Instead of coding directly into a etherpad instance or saving our work into
> an etherpad instance, how about we use Bzr and launchpad, and use IRC and
> etherpad as a way of communicating. This way we can work on our own branches
> of the code (a good
On 14 March 2010 21:21, Daniel Bell wrote:
> Instead of coding directly into a etherpad instance or saving our work into
> an etherpad instance, how about we use Bzr and launchpad, and use IRC and
> etherpad as a way of communicating. This way we can work on our own branches
> of the code (a good
Instead of coding directly into a etherpad instance or saving our work into
an etherpad instance, how about we use Bzr and launchpad, and use IRC and
etherpad as a way of communicating. This way we can work on our own branches
of the code (a good advantage of the distributed version control) and us
On 14 March 2010 20:15, Alan Pope wrote:
>
> Consider using our Etherpad instance instead of gobby. It's browser
> based and as such requires no software install. It's also cooler ;)
>
> http://pad.ubuntu-uk.org/
>
> If you visit that page you'll get an automagically generated new
> document, just
On 14 March 2010 20:11, Thomas Ibbotson wrote:
> Good to see we've got some interest in this. I've now created a team
> at http://pyweek.org/e/ubuntu-uk/ so if you want to join you'll need
> to register as a user and then send me your username so I can add you
> to the team. It would be good to ha
> On 10 March 2010 10:00, Thomas Ibbotson wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> PyWeek, the python game programming challenge where contestants have
>> to write a game from scratch in python in a week, starts in 17 days.
>> Registration is open. I have already registered a solo entry, but it
>> might be more int