On Thu, 2006-04-27 at 18:04 +0200, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: > Am Donnerstag, den 27.04.2006, 10:41 -0400 schrieb seth vidal: > > > It's of no use to me to see that there was a package called > > > abracatabra built unless I'm the packager/reviewer. If a new package > > > enters the system I (as a user) want to see what that package does w/o > > > guessing from the name. And I want to be able to separate new from > > > updates. For an update I'd like to know why it was updated, so the > > > first lines of the changelog are nice to look at. > > > > I guess I don't think doing it in mail is useful, really. I prefer rss > > feeds for this kind of information. And putting changelogs and other > > misc info in an rss feed makes more sense - at least to me. > > Not for me -- I don't use rss feeds normally so they would create a > extra hurdle for me. And mail a IMHO has a important benefit: It will > always land in my Inbox -- I don't have to remember to look at the feed > once a day. > > Maybe I'm a bit old fashioned in this context. But I'm probably not the > only one. > > CU > thl > > P.S.: I don't like Webforums for the same reasons -- mail from several > mailing lists with different topics is always delivered to one place (my > inbox) and I don't have to browse to X webforums (with Y different > interfaces) daily to see what's new ("push vs. pull") I don't really disagree. But an rss feed has the ease of being able to be spit out into email automatically. Going from email->rss is harder but rss->email isn't hard at all. The virtue of known formats :) -sv -- fedora-extras-list mailing list fedora-extras-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-extras-list