I have a similar issue.  I'm trying to add a collaborator to my
account (can add up to 5).

I had the collaborator create a free account,
 but when I try to add them from admin > Collaborators it doesn't
work.

Clicking add with their new account name doesn't give any error
message but just blanks it out and doesn't add them ?



On Aug 31, 3:10 pm, Tekkub <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Go to Admin > Collaborators, add them.  They each need thier own github
> account of course, but that's free.  Depending on how you want you things
> set up, you might make a free account for yourself and add that also, so
> that your company account simply owns the repos/pays the bill and never
> actually pushes commits.
>
> You might want to check out this 
> guide:http://github.com/guides/managing-multiple-clients-and-their-reposito...
>
> After they're in, they can either work in branches directly in your
> "blessed" repo or you can have them fork.  Either way you probably don't
> want anyone committing to the master branch in the base repo.  Instead you
> (or whoever you designate to maintain the master) would merge their branches
> into master when needed.  I personally go for the fork route, simply because
> I got sick of naming my branches "tekkub-tix123" and such.
>
> --tek
>
> On Sun, Aug 31, 2008 at 4:02 PM, Laran Evans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Disclosure: I'm a git noob. I'm coming from using Subversion. So I'm
> > used to having a master copy which everyone develops against. I know
> > this isn't the way Git works. But I do need to be able to have
> > "master" copies of the code from which everyone can pull/push so that
> > we can all stay in sync.
>
> > I want to run Git within a development shop. Multiple people will be
> > developing code.
>
> > I created an account for the company. I'm thinking that this should be
> > the master version of the code from which everyone will fork. Problem
> > is that I created this with my own email address. So I'll probably
> > want to switch that so that it doesn't use my email address and
> > instead uses a different email address.
>
> > I've pushed my code up into my first repository. The repository is
> > private. Now I need to allow my developers to pull/fork from this
> > master copy. How do I do this? It's private, so nobody else can see
> > it. But I didn't see any way to add collaborators. Do I just send them
> > a pull request? Do they have to have a GitHub account to be able to
> > work with the code?
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