Because One Hundred Papercuts:
* is designed for the average
<https://wiki.ubuntu.com/One%20Hundred%20Papercuts/Average%20users>
user.
* is composed by papercuts
<https://wiki.ubuntu.com/One%20Hundred%20Papercuts/Papercuts> only.
* uses a kanban <http://youtu.be/R8dYLbJiTUE> work-flow
<https://wiki.ubuntu.com/One%20Hundred%20Papercuts/Workflow> (oh...
I just realized I reinvented the wheel :)
To contribute to this project will be always *easier* than anything in
Quality.
El 19/01/14 17:56, Elfy escribió:
On 19/01/14 16:32, Simone Guidi wrote:
Ok now i am confused
Alberto Salvia Novella wrote:
> We also have a project for *newcomers*: ? One Hundred Papercuts
<https://launchpad.net/hundredpapercuts>, where bugs are *easier* to
manage.
So i think that is a easier point to start
Elfy wrote:
> The hundred papercuts project isn't for everyone - not everyone can
code.
> To test - you need to be able to boot an image and then read a
testcase :)
So testing is easier than The Hundred Papercuts ? or is the opposite ?
Anyway i'm a programmer so i know how to write code but i'm a newbie
with ubuntu.
--
Simone Guidi
e-mail :gsimone21...@gmail.com
Wiki :http://wiki.ubuntu-it.org/SimoneGuidi
Launchpad :https://launchpad.net/~gsimone21892
Skype: g.simo999
QA and bugsquad are 'linked' we're all working towards the same goal.
Testing is easier that hundred papercuts.
If you can code then you would, I assume, be able to do both. I say
assume because I've not the first idea about programming :)
Alberto Salvia Novella's "We also have a project for *newcomers*"
doesn't actually mean it's easier.
Hope that makes it less confusing.
Elfy
--
Ubuntu Forum Council Member
Xubuntu QA Lead
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