Hi Alan, I mainly focus on hurd, and make it work there.
I have a plan to release one full function text base hurd with perfect Chinese support, and now I try to make Chinese input method works first. Why I need dotgnu is that I hope I can support one workable ncurses with c# binding( under help of swig), that's may be interesting for some hack to do first program in Hurd:), but port mono was not easy. dotgnu was not so well, but it's small and easy envolution. I am very interesting to make dotgnu to be one debian native package, to make it easy for envolution. Are you interesting in developing or other way to help? Thanks, Cong Zhang On Tue, Apr 8, 2014 at 2:00 AM, Alan Shea Anderson-Priddy < [email protected]> wrote: > Since learning more about dotGNU and it's current project status, I've > moved over to Mono. But recently I've read things in the news about > how Microsoft might buy them out... Seems like that could go either > way. > > So as far as helping out, I've mostly chosen to help out with testing > for Trisquel and some of the included packages. On the side I'm > running test environments with Hurd and Guix. (thanks again everyone > for the infos) =) > > > On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 7:24 AM, Zhang Cong <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Hi, > > > > As .Net Foundation was created, maybe it's a good time to make dotgnu > > work again:) > > > > The BCL and C# was very powerful and elegant:) > > > > Cong Zhang > > > > > > On Mon, Feb 17, 2014 at 6:45 AM, Alan Shea Anderson-Priddy > > <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > >> Brandon, > >> Thanks for writing back. I read that the project was no longer under > dev, > >> but I misunderstood all of what that meant as far as a maintainer. I do > have > >> an interest in the dotGNU project, so I'm glad the information is still > up > >> on the website. > >> > >> I'm definitely interested in volunteering, though being a maintainer > might > >> be deeper than what I'm prepared for at the moment. Maybe being more > >> familiar with the community would help me. So I'm reading about these > >> projects on https://www.gnu.org/server/takeaction.html#unmaint which is > >> interesting. Seems like it would be helpful if someone went through and > >> filled in pages such as https://www.gnu.org/software/polyxmass/ so > that it > >> has a little bit more of the GNU website feel instead of just a few > lines of > >> text. Is that something that would be helpful? Is there a Savannah page > or > >> an issue tracker for the GNU website itself? > >> > >> I noticed the questionnaire for GNU projects. Is there one for new > >> volunteers? I'm still reading through these pages, so if there is maybe > I'll > >> find it myself. > >> > >> Thanks, > >> -Alan > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> On Sat, Feb 15, 2014 at 11:30 AM, Brandon Invergo <[email protected]> > >> wrote: > >>> > >>> Hi Alan, > >>> > >>> > Looks like Norbert's email address is down; the message bounced > >>> > back. Sending this to both the dotgun-general and the gnu > maintainers. > >>> > Looks like the http://wiki.dotgnu.org/WebsiteComments/projects page > is > >>> > down. Or perhaps the entire wiki. > >>> > >>> Thanks for your message. dotgnu was decommissioned a little over a > year > >>> ago. There's a message about it on www.gnu.org/s/dotgnu and > >>> www.dotgnu.org. This means that there is currently no development > >>> effort and no official maintainer for the project anymore, nor are we > >>> actively seeking a new maintainer. With that said, if someone is > >>> interested in volunteering to maintain and actively develop dotgnu, we > >>> of course would not say no! > >>> > >>> Regards, > >>> Brandon Invergo > >> > >> > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> Dotgnu-general mailing list > >> [email protected] > >> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/dotgnu-general > >> > > >
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