From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.0 (2014-02-07) on dcvr.yhbt.net X-Spam-Level: X-Spam-ASN: AS8560 212.227.0.0/16 X-Spam-Status: No, score=-4.2 required=3.0 tests=AWL,BAYES_00,FREEMAIL_FROM, RCVD_IN_DNSWL_LOW,RCVD_IN_MSPIKE_H2,SPF_PASS shortcircuit=no autolearn=ham autolearn_force=no version=3.4.0 Received: from mout.gmx.net (mout.gmx.net [212.227.17.20]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 (256/256 bits)) (No client certificate requested) by dcvr.yhbt.net (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 29D032018E; Thu, 25 Aug 2016 12:59:00 +0000 (UTC) Received: from virtualbox ([37.24.141.250]) by mail.gmx.com (mrgmx102) with ESMTPSA (Nemesis) id 0Lg6op-1anrqd29JD-00pbhR; Thu, 25 Aug 2016 14:58:56 +0200 Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2016 14:58:41 +0200 (CEST) From: Johannes Schindelin X-X-Sender: virtualbox@virtualbox To: Eric Wong cc: Stefan Beller , meta@public-inbox.org, git@vger.kernel.org Subject: Re: Working with public-inbox.org [Was: [PATCH] rev-parse: respect core.hooksPath in --git-path] In-Reply-To: <20160822225549.GA25383@starla> Message-ID: References: <20160818204902.GA1670@starla> <20160819223547.GB16646@dcvr> <20160822225549.GA25383@starla> User-Agent: Alpine 2.20 (DEB 67 2015-01-07) MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII X-Provags-ID: V03:K0:h0hxRZSwwtzdagWoGRTl58pRCZ7J7Gasz06g/GyWzt0JDkAooJQ kaBfgIIwyzg3orjsw0ycnSD8mbWrSp3Iy3nN4daRgDdl89xu9UD2iIxgBi2+8Zd3MMguDGY 8N9KRBIIZayrxK9Ny8qMeo7hOdNVuT6dU8sWR8btLuPgEIgNXyZTYtixMFzJ31inteUGl+i PKAZul7eB2+7LhKn06HbA== X-UI-Out-Filterresults: notjunk:1;V01:K0:+2ng942L2V8=:0rFDiaz2tysLLk4tNU3GZr j0oAdRZplenXRu0ykxqQxLsRrnwf/RQbTUChDT7fIXuOnXJgh+dYYs/vX2zuvv34xhAsWtM+e f6epv0aa3prvOjRvQ8b+Wr2WZW8LqwGjcSwGPiF9+f+WKrntIaZBOS60hpG1wMbwStVf+a48K 832tAWI8eFGUpxwJhN4+iCIm1b9kVSdJa+w6VsfXHRDc82dWXO65U8uvCi+kDsa4PildUQgXG 677ourTgi1uTA75yWvykoSVFqIALTC+oIv5tqGlOEEIAF7TMGPmtZ1Y9oMBYfuwTlJWeRYMBJ fdfehdwtaNnHJOcoWL5Rtn1o66qHuKLyiemHlORnnKcNib4AFEAvctDVx1FDJCenTK6ESbSaw R0LZ2+vvRqzGKuhrlV1Ng/ZKTNYUqo1ekqB+yjMeA6Bk9wPRdy0L0vSjm2veCWMvxfVDOOont C7qUwZSQwLNL/boNRin6EmAOFz66yBdIxPYukeFPNYqGB0jXCpQYLs2N69IOIjcTP/LpDmJPe KVnFdaed+CJ7ZYrui8z9gwSIBofUSqnmiGH0Hfd08sH05GBUPvBbsK8lC/BkeIxxDJyrA1ojj GYRdo0aGEMfy9D47RaXXuAljIc5cA02Tt3Oh2KMrEFFQqojMancc7AfPF+/RAGVmrlWWC9KIS X/p8PeEAAiKY8L1lNVA83z0YDpaLvh1Q+i0dVtjiDN0Ph4jjlmAhcPHUwyS6yA/TL9j3ri40R 2Tk3OZmmPvP4gBDnoJPbPDuB8pWl/sEavK87JYcqMgVjLskfMb9DKIazUT75l+7fnwJvJ32tv HzjJf1g List-Id: Hi Eric, On Mon, 22 Aug 2016, Eric Wong wrote: > Johannes Schindelin wrote: > > > I just want developers who are already familiar with Git, and come up with > > an improvement to Git itself, to be able to contribute it without having > > to pull out their hair in despair. > > We want the same thing. I just want to go farther and get > people familiar with (federated|decentralized) tools instead of > proprietary and centralized ones. Why require users to get familiar with (federated|decentralized) tools *unless* they make things provably more convenient? So far, I only see that this would add to the hurdle, not improve things. Ciao, Dscho