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Over time, some of the KT newsletters have lost their authors, although the projects they covered are still very much alive and well. This page links to those newsletters. If anyone is interested in starting any of these up again, please contact Zack Brown.
Zack Brown wrote a single issue of Git Traffic, covering the first several
months of activity on the git mailing list.
Git Traffic Home Page
Git Traffic Archives
Git Traffic People
Git Traffic Topics
Zack Rusin, Charles de Miramon, Juergen Appel, Leif Jensen, Rob Kaper,
Timothy R. Butler, Aaron J. Seigo, and Chris Howells have all contributed to
this newsletter, producing a total of 46 issues. It covers development of
the K Desktop Environment.
KDE Traffic Home Page
KDE Traffic Archives
KDE Traffic People
KDE Traffic Topics
Sam Phillips wrote the first six issues of this newsletter, then was replaced
by Alex Harford until issue #25, when Cris Flagg took over. Cris took it
through issue #44. It covers development of the Gimp image manipulation tool.
Gimp Traffic Home Page
Gimp Traffic Archives
Gimp Traffic People
Gimp Traffic Topics
A number of people contributed to the first 28 issues of Debian Traffic,
including Zack Brown, Prashanth MundKur, Steve Robins, Jens Müller, Eusebio
C Rufian-Zilbermann, Seth Kohn, Benedict Köhler, Peter Eckersley, Martin
Michlmayr, and Ronan O'Sullivan. It covers development of the Debian Linux
distribution.
Debian Traffic Home Page
Debian Traffic Archives
Debian Traffic People
Debian Traffic Topics
Debian Traffic In German
Peter Samuelson wrote the first 25 issues of this newsletter, while John
Quirk and Zack Brown wrote the next 15. It covers development of the Samba
filesharing tool.
Samba Traffic Home Page
Samba Traffic Archives
Samba Traffic People
Samba Traffic Topics
Jeff Waugh wrote 7 fine issues of this newsletter. It covers the antics of
the Sydney Linux User's Group in Australia.
SLUG Pearls Home Page
SLUG Pearls Archives
SLUG Pearls People
SLUG Pearls Topics
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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. |