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[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]]
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- People agreed that some small projects should be done to during the bonding
period: ideas that floated around were fixing some of the build failures or
looking at the new debian installer.
http://unstable.buildd.net/buildd/hurd-i386_Failed.html
http://unstable.buildd.net/index-hurd-i386.html
For some context:
http://dept-info.labri.fr/~thibault/tmp/graph-radial.ps
Don't pick something that looks too critical, it'll probably be too hard
- Antrik was ok with not having a formal weekly report as long as the
repositories are growing and the students are around
- Discussion about scms. It's ok to have your own, you'll get you own branch,
just make sure to make your own repository public. There was some talk about
not checking in one huge commit at the end
- Copyright assignments to the FSF are required for most of hurd and other gnu
projects. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-hurd/2008-03/msg00175.html
is your friend. Fill it out 3 times: Mach, Hurd, glibc. It's ok if you're
not planning on working on all of these. Email to fsf-records@gnu.org
- Non-SoC students were offered some compensation for doing their projects
anyway. They were far more interested in the fact that they would be doing
worthwhile work than financial compensation
- It was agreed that regular meetings would be a good idea. Once a
week, especially in the bonding period.
- In general it was agreed that conversations shouldn't stay between just
mentors and their students, that it's better to keep everything out in the
open
- Non-SoC students were assigned mentors, though it was agreed that they would
be mostly a primary contact and that most conversations should be kept
public
- Discussion turned back to the meetings, the usual back and forth about the
timeslot. Fridays at 19 UTC was decided as the meeting time.
- It was suggested that students look into writing documentation/guides for
hurd, for example cross-compiling hurd on gentoo, as a way to get more
familliar.
- Andrei will set up a google calendar for organizing meetings.
- Antrik noted that IRC is good for quick questions but serious ones should go
to the mailing list to get everyone involved.
And so the first meeting was concluded.
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