Is there any historical information on torrent downloads for F8 testing
phases? i.e. Week-by-week downloads or something similar? The final
numbers appear to be gone from the tracker page -- was anything retained
somewhere I could peruse?
--
Paul W. Frields http://paul.frields.org/
gpg fingerprint: 3DA6 A0AC 6D58 FEC4 0233 5906 ACDB C937 BD11 3717
http://redhat.com/ - - - - http://pfrields.fedorapeople.org/irc.freenode.net: stickster @ #fedora-docs, #fedora-devel, #fredlug
Would a proposal to develop a (likely Django, definitely python based)
UI to manage the free media distribution process be welcome? I imagine
that the proposal/project process is getting pretty competitive. I
have an associate who is interested in participating, and I would be
willing to mentor/assist as necessary.
Arthur Pemberton
--
Fedora 7 : sipping some of that moonshine
( www.pembo13.com )
>> "The main difference between Lyceum and MU is the database schema. MU
>> creates a set of tables for each blog in a system. Lyceum uses a fixed
>> number of tables for the entire system."
> IOW, Lyceum does it right, MU does it wrong, from a strictly technical
>standpoint.
"Strictly technical" in what sense?
>> From a resource/performance perspective, is that wise? How great a
>> risk is there that "small" and "medium" (fuzzy terms) volume blogs may
>> suffer performance hits due to their "much larger" brethren?
> Unless the software is coded in a grossly inappropriate manner, little
> to none.
My question was directed at physical resources and access issues related to data volume. After a certain scaling point, no matter how grossly appropriate the coding of the software, negative impacts related to contention for tables and physical resources will happen. I am asking people likely to have knowledge of projected/expected data volumes to consider those risks.
> appreciated if we can hear your comments or suggestions.
>From Lyceum's faq:
"The main difference between Lyceum and MU is the database schema. MU creates a set of tables for each blog in a system. Lyceum uses a fixed number of tables for the entire system."
>From a resource/performance perspective, is that wise? How great a risk is there that "small" and "medium" (fuzzy terms) volume blogs may suffer performance hits due to their "much larger" brethren? What about backup and maintenance issues, e.g., one table "issue" kills many blogs? Since I have no sense of projected data volume or anticipated numbers of blogs competing for shared resources/tables, these questions are blind.
Hi all,
I wondered if somebody could help me out and create a static version of the
Beta release notes at
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/9/Beta/ReleaseNotes ?
Hopefully we'll be able to avoid the problems this caused with the Alpha
release :)
Many thanks,
Jon
Hello,
I need to change my account name from renich to renichbon so I can be a
wiki editor.
Can you help me?
# was @:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/accounts/home
--
Renich Bon Ciric <renich(a)woralelandia.com>
Woralelandia
Recently I took the task of getting a few feeds hosted on the front page
of fedoraproject.org. To do that I opened a ticket[1], learned that the
code is available to do this, and here are mock-ups of what that could
look like:
http://quaid.fedorapeople.org/websites/front-page-feed-mock-up/mock-up-fp...http://quaid.fedorapeople.org/websites/front-page-feed-mock-up/fedoraproj...
^-- (actual updated content and CSS in use above)
The design is a bit of a strawman, in that it is there for you to spring
other ideas from and don't worry about tearing it down; I see problems
with it but I'm not going to tweak it any further at this point. I was
originally thinking of stacking the feeds in a side bar, but I figured
we could sneak it in and lose 60% of the 120 pixels of whitespace from
the bottom of the #content area and not squeeze the page horizontally.
Any objection to the idea of putting some feeds that are specifically
useful to Fedorans on the fedoraproject.org front page?
What do you think about adding these to start.fedoraproject.org?
Any ideas about how to address this for translations? In the ticket[1]
I suggest:
> My only concern would be how that will work with non-English
> translations.
That's a good question. I know Red Hat Magazine experimented
with the Google auto-translation links Wordpress plugin, and it
didn't go over so well. Having this content in English on
translated pages ... is that rude? Or better than nothing?
What I'd like to try is this:
1. Come up with a stacked design so we can have separate feeds
reading in rather than jamming them all into one
2. Put up the RSS feed pull code and start displaying the feeds
as-is
Thanks - Karsten
[1] https://fedorahosted.org/fedora-infrastructure/ticket/357
--
Karsten Wade, Developer Community Mgr.
Dev Fu : http://developer.redhatmagazine.com
Fedora : http://quaid.fedorapeople.org
gpg key : AD0E0C41
HI,
I have builded a server with fedora 7, and I want to make a mirror of
your websites, please recommend the tool for this. Thank you!
Best Wishes!
2008.3.18
To whom it may concern:
I've tried multiple times to download the image of Fedora 8, both
Bittorrent and from a mirror. In all cases, when I have the media test
itself, it says that the file is corrupted and I shouldn't install.
Perhaps there is a problem with the files available for download.
Thank you.
J Darcy
Legal confirmed for the Board that:
* We no longer need to require GPG signatures for our CLA signing
process. This means that the FAS2 can be modified to greatly speed up
this process. Refer to:
https://hosted.fedoraproject.org/fedora-infrastructure/ticket/438
* We still need CLA for wiki writers, but now that we don't need the
GPG, this can be a fully click-through process if the Websites team can
make it so. In other words, if I want to save my contribution, I still
have to agree to the CLA. That means the wiki needs to be tied to FAS2
somehow to check my account.
In a way, I guess this is "good news + bad news" because it might mean
some work to accomplish the second task. Is this possible to do? If
so, who on Websites can own the task?
--
Paul W. Frields http://paul.frields.org/
gpg fingerprint: 3DA6 A0AC 6D58 FEC4 0233 5906 ACDB C937 BD11 3717
http://redhat.com/ - - - - http://pfrields.fedorapeople.org/irc.freenode.net: stickster @ #fedora-docs, #fedora-devel, #fredlug