Excerpts from Matt Riedemann's message of 2018-01-26 10:08:46 -0600:
> On 1/26/2018 9:57 AM, Doug Hellmann wrote:
> > Ideally we would use the time at the PTG to discuss implementation
> > details.
>
> For something like the mox one, there really are no implementation
> details, are there?
>
Th
On 1/26/2018 9:57 AM, Doug Hellmann wrote:
Ideally we would use the time at the PTG to discuss implementation
details.
For something like the mox one, there really are no implementation
details, are there?
--
Thanks,
Matt
___
Excerpts from Matt Riedemann's message of 2018-01-26 09:38:18 -0600:
> On 1/23/2018 12:40 PM, Chris Dent wrote:
> > ## OpenStack-wide Goals
> >
> > There are four proposed [OpenStack-wide
> > goals](https://governance.openstack.org/tc/goals/index.html):
> >
> > * [Add Cold upgrades
> > capabil
On 1/23/2018 12:40 PM, Chris Dent wrote:
## OpenStack-wide Goals
There are four proposed [OpenStack-wide
goals](https://governance.openstack.org/tc/goals/index.html):
* [Add Cold upgrades
capabilities](https://review.openstack.org/#/c/533544/)
* [Add Rocky goal to remove
mox](https://revi
On 1/23/2018 5:22 PM, Chris Dent wrote:
if i were to (potentially) oversimplify it, i would agree with this
statement:
http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/irclogs/%23openstack-tc/%23openstack-tc.2018-01-23.log.html#t2018-01-23T10:12:22
i don't believe a PTL necessarily has to keep the whole state
On Tue, 23 Jan 2018, gordon chung wrote:
i love this intro. when does your coming-of-age book come out? :)
What, you don't have it already? It's _so_ amazing.
i think this probably links back to the issues with openstack-specs.
maybe it's because the tasks aren't flashy enough, maybe it's be
On 2018-01-23 01:40 PM, Chris Dent wrote:
>
> (Hyperlinkified for your pleasure:
> https://anticdent.org/tc-report-18-04.html )
>
> When a person is in early adolescence they get cramps in their legs
> and call it growing pains. Later, in adulthood, there's a different
> kind of pain when the
(Hyperlinkified for your pleasure: https://anticdent.org/tc-report-18-04.html )
When a person is in early adolescence they get cramps in their legs
and call it growing pains. Later, in adulthood, there's a different
kind of pain when the strategies and tactics used to survive
adolescence are no