On 07/08/13 at 21:57 +0200, Kurt Roeckx wrote: > On Wed, Aug 07, 2013 at 09:52:41PM +0200, Lucas Nussbaum wrote: > > | It seems that we could get better at listing possible contributions. For > > | example, we could have a 'apt-list-possible-contributions' tool that would > > | list installed packages that are orphaned or RFAed. > > Like wnpp-alert?
Clearly, we have many useful and interesting packages that are orphaned, and would be quite easy to maintain for newcomers. If prospective contributors don't identify them as possible targets, it means that wnpp-alert fails to advertise such contribution targets to newcomers. Why? How can we fix that? - I think that wnpp-alert is still relatively unknown - wnpp-alert is not intrusive. Personally, I tend to run it once or twice a year to demo it to people, and that's all (shame on me). Setting it up in a way that reports newly orphaned packages is not completely trivial (you can run it with --diff in a cron job, but then you need a local mail setup). Something more intrusive like apt-listchanges or apt-listbugs could give better results. - wnpp-alert only reports about packages in WNPP. we could report about other possible targets for contribution. For example, we are not very good at identifying packages that should be orphaned, but there are quite simple criterias that can be used to determine packages where the maintainer could use some help. Lucas -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-project-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20130807203524.ga5...@xanadu.blop.info