On 29 Nov 2013, at 16:40, Fleeky Flanco wrote:
i really dont understand why i have to be explaining the usefullness
of
using wave to communicate with the people on this list. its kindof
amazing.
If you don't understand why we operate on a mailing list then you
probably have
not understood that the ASF tries to develop in an open way. All
discussions must held
public and must be archived for a long time. The only solution so far is
mailing lists.
Wave is simply not that far to provide that at the moment.
Of course there is an opportunity to bring Wave to the ASF. But there
are a lot of requirements
to meet. If you want to develop here, you need to fulfill these
requirements.
We have discussed that several times. Every of the committers understood
these requirements
and were working against them. However Wave is not there yet.
This doesn't answer the question which was initially asked: is the ASF
the right place?
Or more precise: can we as a project ever succeed the incubator and
become an ASF project?
This has nothing to do with the great technology behind Wave nor the
willingness of people.
It is: is there enough manpower to live the ASF way or not.
Christian
fleeky
On Fri, Nov 29, 2013 at 4:19 PM, Robert Brumbelow
<rkbrumbe...@gmail.com>wrote:
Fleeky, those are fine for us, they will do little for outside
exposure. I would suspect having to use wave in order to learn to use
wave might be self defeating.
On Fri, Nov 29, 2013 at 10:05 AM, Fleeky Flanco <fle...@gmail.com>
wrote:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/WAVE/Building+Wave+in+a+Box
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/WAVE/Home
also there is #wiab on irc.freenode.net
also Ali just a few emails up mentioned that you could start a
discussion
on his wave server , why not try those things first? and if there
is a
problem, go to Ali's wave server and simply start a problems wave
add the
participant @domain to the wave and everyone inclduing Ali on that
server
should be able to see your problem wave, and maybe attempt to answer
your
problem.
-fleeky
On Fri, Nov 29, 2013 at 4:01 PM, Robert Brumbelow
<rkbrumbe...@gmail.com
wrote:
Thomas,
Hangouts on air are the recorded versions of Google Hangouts,
they are streamed and recorded via Youtube. Screencasts, I thought,
also defaulted to being recorded.
I know during my years of teaching, video was often preferred by
students simply because even in step by step instruction, aka hand
holding, there would be something glossed over, ignored or assumed
known by students or the teacher. Video shows every keystroke,
command
and mouse movement
--
Kelly Brumbelow
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http://www.grobmeier.de
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