development

Tomorrow's event: Open Source 101

This night, I'm preparing the slidedeck for an Open Source 101 course; a course for Account Managers and junior System Administrators that do get the occasional "Open Source?" question (they get that a lot BTW), or have to deal with Debian Sarge systems that run that one piece of core infrastructure (such as anti-spam and anti-virus for the entire mail environment, or routers, or proxy servers, or web servers, or ... you name it... :P)

On tonights agenda, also;

  • Building a stack on top of Ruby 1.9.1-p243
  • Getting my own Koji back up and running (it used dist-f7-updates to build for dist-f11-rebuild-ruby_1.9.1, and no reference to dist-f7-updates anywhere in the database or on the filesystem)
  • Working through the humongous list of bugs assigned to me on Red Hat's Bugzilla

Good night everyone!

#needcoffee, #needsleep, #needbeer, #needraise

A better tester?

I don't recall having said Yaakov should be a better tester, or to test rawhide more often, but I may have been intoxica^H^H^H^H^H forgotten I did.

Here's what I do each release cycle though; By the time I feel comfortable enough (about the next Fedora release that is), which often is the Beta freeze of our development cycle, I make the jump to rawhide on my main workstation as well as my laptop.

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