<quote who="Sanford Armstrong"> > I simply meant that less people are familiar with D-SCM tools and that > they are somewhat harder for a newbie to learn than C-SCM tools.
This is an unfortunate cultural relic created by arch/tla, and hilariously promulgated by git. Sure, fewer people are familiar with them, but the good ones are not harder to learn. In fact, because full source code management functionality is available to you without having prior permission from the developers (an account), you can learn the basics (functionality shared by distributed and centralised systems) way faster. (The only difficult/additional thing to learn in the current environment is distributed best practices, and that is only an issue if you're actually using the distributed functionality; just because the tool does it, doesn't mean you have to!) - Jeff -- linux.conf.au 2008: Melbourne, Australia http://lca2008.linux.org.au/ "No shit, [EMAIL PROTECTED]" - Mr. Bad _______________________________________________ foundation-list mailing list foundation-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-list