On Aug 20, 2011, at 12:26, momcilo.ma...@gmail.com wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> According to the election terms, the nominations have not started yet.

Ooops. I'm early. Oh well, release early, release often. :)

> 
> Nominations open: 00:00, Thursday, 1st September 2011
> Nominations close: 23:59, Wednesday, 15th September 2011
> Voting opens: 00:00, Thursday, 22nd September 2010
> Voting closes: 23:59, Wednesday, 28th September 2010
> 
> Personally I think Debian rocks, but how do you integrate maemo software 
> within Debian?

Damn good question. And that needs to be answered without a lot of handwaving. 
The DEX project began as Canonical's CTO identified a bunch of patches in 
Ubuntu that were relevant to Debian. I wonder if we might have the same? That 
is to say, I'd mine the Maemo package databases and find packages that were 
also in Debian, see if they are different from Debian and add the delta back to 
Debian. Along that path I bet we'll find other useful things for Debian, like 
changes to Lintian that are maybe appropriate for "vendor" Lintian checks. This 
is something I could add to my long stalled maemian project.

> In addition we have an issue related to the closed sourced binaries?

By moving software patches back to Debian, we can also begin to exert pressure 
on Nokia to supply any patches that they haven't yet added. They no longer have 
the business case to keep these blobs closed since they're no longer supporting 
Linux. We can demonstrate that we have the interest to do the work for them and 
that they have the obligation to provide those changes and that is about all we 
can do. But that is something.

> Which devices would be targeted?

I think if we had some interesting middleware from Maemo that ran on things 
like the OMAP 3 and 4, as well as the Freescale QSB, and Tegra 2 then we could 
make the case that there is software for tablets and phones as well as other 
mobile devices. That might be good motivation for people to hack these devices 
and put a Linux kernel on them, in fact all these chips have a Linux kernel 
already, so it wouldn't be much work to have a Debian like OS on anything that 
runs these chips and include Maemo middleware. That alone might persuade 
developers to continue to develop their software leading to new versions and 
potentially a completely free telephony stack for ARM.

That is what I had in mind anyway. What do you think? What is the feedback from 
others?

Regards,

Jeremiah
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