On 01/10/13 15:55, Yossi Kantor wrote: > Tom, > > Open source or not, there are normal human relations and you will comply > to them (With me at least). > (There are actually a lot of respectful ways you could have done the > same thing it openly > but its not my job to teach you how).
No, I will not comply with your human relation guidelines. It makes more sense to follow guidelines set by the community in which we are participating, or the "world" (open source) we are communicating in. > I'm a software engeneer in a comercial organization. Like you. There is > a job I do in relation > and demands of this organization. You or anyone else not knowing me is > really not my problem. Yes, but that does not matter at all in this context. No one cares about your job, organization and status. All we care about is if you produce good code, and if we can trust you with commit access. We don't know you at all, so we obviously can't. > (I'm not a rock star(yet) ). Let's hope you will be. > "Trust measured in quantity? " - Seriously dude.... Well, no need to nit-pick, I obviously meant that trust is earned over time, and not by the quality of random patches. Just wanted to align it with your quality/quantity example. -- Tom. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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