On Saturday 29 July 2006 11:17, Eduard Bloch wrote: --cut-- > > > The innovation in udev (with HAL, new kernel features and other stuff) > > > is allowing implementing new features which used to not be possible or > > > required very complex hacks. > > > There is a middle ground between useless and innovative, BTW. > > > > Could you please give your definition for `innovation' ? (If it is about > > to distribute more and more non-free stuff, then I'm glad we have > > different definitions for innovation.) > > Haha, now the thread reaches the point where every fanatic uncovers his > favorite issue and begins to "interpret" into it. Can we stop here right > now? Or move it to a separate thread, thanks.
Ok, sorry for the bad taste... I didn't intend personal attacks, just trying to grasp what someone's definition for innovation could be. Here is what I think a debian related innovation could look like: http://lists.debian.org/debian-project/2006/07/msg00034.html it is innovation because: a) it introduces new ideas, and b) get the successful exploitation of these new ideas. Please, do not CC, I'm subscribed. -- pub 4096R/0E4BD0AB 2003-03-18 <people.fccf.net/danchev/key pgp.mit.edu> fingerprint 1AE7 7C66 0A26 5BFF DF22 5D55 1C57 0C89 0E4B D0AB -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]