"we created a set of wireless headsets by taking ancient wired headsets, and not plugging them in"
Table Of Contents
1. | 26�Oct�2003 | #gnue-commits | |
2. | 26�Oct�2003 | HTML UI driver for forms | |
3. | 28�Oct�2003 | Chinese and Windows 98 | |
4. | 31�Oct�2003 | Documentation |
Introduction
This covers the three main mailing lists for the GNU Enterprise (http://www.gnuenterprise.org) project, plus the #gnuenterprise IRC channel.1. #gnue-commits
26�Oct�2003�Archive Link: "[IRC] 26 Oct 2003"
People: Jeff Bailey
Jeff Bailey (jbailey) said he expected "to finish getting #gnue-commits setup" . "Right now CVS commits all go to #commits with all the other projects, so it's vanity stuff, not terribly useful."
Later, on October 27, Jeff announced #gnue-commits existance - "CVS Commit messages now go to #gnue-commits live!"
2. HTML UI driver for forms
26�Oct�2003�Archive Link: "[IRC] 26 Oct 2003"
People: Daniel Baumann,�Andrew Mitchell
Daniel Baumann (chillywilly) asked whether there was "an html UI driver for forms" . Andrew Mitchell (ajmitch) pointed to the "stuff in gnue/gnue-appserver/extensions/webfrontend" . "It seems to be a web forms client" .
3. Chinese and Windows 98
28�Oct�2003�Archive Link: "[IRC] 28 Oct 2003"
People: Jan Ischebeck,�Bajusz Tam�s
Jan Ischebeck (siesel) noticed that "the win32 ui don't work because of a dll loading problem" on Windows 98 Chinese edition. The problem appeared to be because win23all version 159 was used. With version 161 the problem disappeared, but appeared another - "the login box for the win32 driver is broken, possibly due to win32all 161" . Bajusz Tam�s (btami) offered using "netrc or direct uname/passw" .
Unicode/chinese with win32/wx uidrivers sample can be found at http://www.gnuenterprise.org/~jan/chinese_win32.png.
4. Documentation
31�Oct�2003�Archive Link: "[IRC] 31 Oct 2003"
People: James Thompson
James Thompson (jamest) offered adding "epydoc support to our setup system" . "It's inspired by javadoc" . More information can be found on http://epydoc.sourceforge.net/index.html.
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Sharon And Joy
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Kernel Traffic is grateful to be developed on a computer donated by Professor Greg Benson and Professor Allan Cruse in the Department of Computer Science at the University of San Francisco. This is the same department that invented FlashMob Computing. Kernel Traffic is hosted by the generous folks at kernel.org. All pages on this site are copyright their original authors, and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0. |