On Fri, Sep 27, 2013 at 09:26:52PM +0200, Thomas Pryds wrote:
> Just to make an attempt as reviving this rather old thread about
> moving Hugin away from Sourceforge, I'll share a discovery I just
> made:
While we're at it. My recent experience with Sourceforge is also quite
negative. Site is slow
Hi
Just to make an attempt as reviving this rather old thread about
moving Hugin away from Sourceforge, I'll share a discovery I just
made:
On github, it is possible to access a repository through both git and
subversion. So, if a developer feels more at home with svn/subversion
than with git, he
On 8 Jul 2013 16:40, "kfj" wrote:
>
> bitbucket offers unlimited users to open source projects, see:
>
> http://www.atlassian.com/software/views/open-source-license-request
>
> It took me a while to find this information, even though I knew it was
so, I couldn't find it. So I sent an email to the s
On Saturday, July 6, 2013 2:40:54 PM UTC+2, Thomas Pryds wrote:
>
> I don't have any experience with bitbucket, but as far as I can read on
> their site, free repositories support only up to 5 developers. Is that
> enough?
bitbucket offers unlimited users to open source projects, see:
http
2013/7/6 Thomas Pryds
> I'm not a Hugin developer (but I am a Hugin translator) and recently I was
> introduced to git and github. I think it has one major advantage, which I
> am not sure is exclusive to git, though: Pull requests. Anyone is able to
> fork a code repository, make their own chang
I'm not a Hugin developer (but I am a Hugin translator) and recently I was
introduced to git and github. I think it has one major advantage, which I
am not sure is exclusive to git, though: Pull requests. Anyone is able to
fork a code repository, make their own changes to that fork, and then
submit
bitbucket.org +1
If we will continue using mercurial, I think bitbucket.org is a nice
candidate.
2013/6/1 Charlie Reiman
> You might want to checkout bitbucket.org instead of github. They support
> mercurial and git and have friendlier free accounts. But I agree the market
> has spoken and git
On Friday, May 31, 2013 11:49:12 PM UTC+2, Charlie Reiman wrote:
>
> You might want to checkout bitbucket.org instead of github. They support
> mercurial and git and have friendlier free accounts. But I agree the market
> has spoken and git has won the day. Bitbucket also support issue tracking
On Friday, May 31, 2013 11:49:12 PM UTC+2, Charlie Reiman wrote:
> You might want to checkout bitbucket.org instead of github. They support
> mercurial and git and have friendlier free accounts.
>
As far as free accounts are concerned, Hugin could use an Open Source tier
organization account; i
You might want to checkout bitbucket.org instead of github. They support
mercurial and git and have friendlier free accounts. But I agree the market has
spoken and git has won the day. Bitbucket also support issue tracking and a
wiki though I have not used the wiki support.
Charlie
On May 30,
Hi Hugin community, long time no seen. Change is inevitable, some of
it good, some of it bad. Today I report what is in my opinion very
bad change to Hugin's infrastructure brought about by Sourceforge; and
I plead for a simple fix: migrate Hugin's code to a better
alternative, probably Github.
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