On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 11:51 AM, Tom Hacohen <tom.haco...@samsung.com>wrote:

> On 01/10/13 11:38, Michael Blumenkrantz wrote:
> > is this a joke? I'm giving him access to work on E, which he HAS been
> doing
> > publicly for months. He's been mentioned on the release blog and his
> > commits are easy enough to find; given that I'm the (only) maintainer for
> > the project, that's more than enough justification. I guess I could
> discuss
> > it with the rest of the developers/maintainers of the project a bit
> longer,
> > but I do enough talking to myself as it is.
> >
> > Don't throw a tantrum just because you got screwed by security today.
>
> That's not how we work and you know it. Chris is the maintainer of that
> made up library he's working on, and yet, we didn't give access to his
> progeny. This is complete bullshit.
>

As I said in regards to that:

I don't support giving commit access to unknowns based solely on their
place of employ or "future" work. This is clearly a different case, as the
person in question has been doing work publicly as well as being available
for others to contact on IRC. Hardly an unknown.


>
> Also, yeah, he's been fixing bugs in E for months, with a total of 4
> commits.
>

Simple fact is that a number of his patches came to me a day or two after
I'd already fixed the issue because of miscommunications. Regardless, this
is still far more commits than I had under my belt when I joined.


>
> Yes, you can discuss it with the rest of the developers, for example,
> everyone mentioned in the "about" dialog would be a start.
>

Okay, so you're saying I should spend the next few months chasing down
people who are long gone from the project or no longer actively develop on
it.


I didn't get screwed by security today, I got to play Super Mario for
1.5 hours today, if anything I should be thanking them.

--
Tom.



I guess you have a lot more time than I do these days to be hassling me
like this when you know I'm already severely overburdened. If you don't
want someone around to fix E bugs which may come up during the upcoming 1+
month that I will likely be unable to do any work, feel free to remove his
access.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
October Webinars: Code for Performance
Free Intel webinars can help you accelerate application performance.
Explore tips for MPI, OpenMP, advanced profiling, and more. Get the most from 
the latest Intel processors and coprocessors. See abstracts and register >
http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=60134791&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk
_______________________________________________
enlightenment-devel mailing list
enlightenment-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/enlightenment-devel

Reply via email to