Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 18:48:09 -0500 From: "Pedro F. Giffuni" <pfgiffun@bachue.usc.unal.edu.co> To: "G. Adam Stanislav" <zen@buddhist.com> Cc: chat@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Applications Message-ID: <3717CC38.4CF1B824@bachue.usc.unal.edu.co> References: <199904160601.XAA88836@rah.star-gate.com> <19990415224102.A47059@ontario.mooseriver.com> <199904160601.XAA88836@rah.star-gate.com> <3.0.6.32.19990416161503.0092d260@mail.bfm.org>
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FWIW; I have had good success having my ports committed for a good reason: my ports usually cover a need that many people share. Everyone, for example, wants to be able to use their ghostscript fonts on X. I understand committers are also volunteers and I don't have any particular interest in pushing them to do something about my ports, but the applications that get committed earlier somehow represent general interest of the community. I sometimes look at freshmeat myself, but there also so much junk coming in, that I thank we don't carry all that bloat in the, already tight, CDs. I suggest that you submit the port for the utility and reference the PR number of the library for it in the new PR. No one is interested in committing a library unless it's used for something, and there are many non-committers that like to test the "fresh" ports. There are one or two libraries that I submitted sometime ago in order to build an Rlab port: nowadays I have no interest in porting Rlab, but if I had sent the complete Rlab port, it would have probably been committed. OTOH, if the port builds and work correctly don't expect much feedback :-). Pedro. "G. Adam Stanislav" escribió: > At 23:14 15-04-1999 -0700, Josef Grosch wrote: > >I think the problem is a lot of FreeBSD people want to be kernel hackers and > >don't want to get their hands dirty with double-entry bookkeeping, > >warehouse, order-entry, or assent management systems. There is just not a > >lot of glory in the hacker world for these kinds of programs. > > Hmmm... I have been writing applications for a long time (started > programming in 1965). One of the first things I did when I got FreeBSD late > last year was to write some tools. I mentioned that at one of the > mailgroups, and received a lot of yawns in return. > > Indeed, any time I mention in any FreeBSD list that I wrote some program, I > get a lot of negative replies, assuring me no one will ever need them and > non-sense like that. > > Then I discovered freshmeat.net and announced my programs there. I received > thousands of visitors from there, mostly Linuxites. I always get instant > feedback from them. For example, version 2.0 of my Graphic Counter Language > had some FreeBSD-specific code which made it impossible to compile under > Linux. I received email from a Linux user who pointed out where exactly the > problem was, and offered to test my software to make sure it compiles and > runs under Linux. > > I have since made two or three submissions to the ports collection. I > received an automated reply with a number assigned to them. That was last I > heard of them (this was about a month ago). The idea behind one of these > port submissions was that it was a library needed to a number of i18n tools > I have developed since. These tools all need the library. But I cannot > release them to the ports collection (although I find it silly to call them > "ports" since I developed them on and for FreeBSD), I cannot release them > because the library is still not in the ports collection, and they need the > library. > > Meanwhile, I announced them all on freshmeat.net. They always get announced > the next day, and my site is swamped by people downloading them. They use > them, too, judging from the email I keep getting. > > So, it is rather ironic: I have developed tools for FreeBSD and am unable > to submit them, while they are already being used by Linuxites all over the > world. > > Adam > --- > Want to design your own web counter? > Get GCL 2.10 from http://www.whizkidtech.net/gcl/ > > To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org > with "unsubscribe freebsd-chat" in the body of the message To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-chat" in the body of the message
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