Le samedi 21 novembre 2009 à 11:43 +0100, Ralf Corsepius a écrit : > On 11/21/2009 10:42 AM, Nicolas Mailhot wrote: > > Le samedi 21 novembre 2009 à 04:31 +0100, Ralf Corsepius a écrit : > > Well I don't, unless you decide to evaluate the "purpose" of every > > binary in Fedora. The "purpose" of "content" is that someone found it > > useful enough to jump through the hoops of Fedora packager sponsorship > > and Fedora review. > > You will always find somebody who finds any arbitrary content useful for > something, ... So what? You will always find somebody who finds any arbitrary binary useful > > When you see the stuff that ends in the repo nowadays I don't see why > > "non-code" packagers should be guettoized just because they're not > > dealing with exalted code such as an nth broken music player, MUA, > > <insert random crap we package here>. > > We are talking about _mere content_ packages, here, ie. strictly > optional "eye/ear" candy packages, things like background package of > "your favorite city", "your child", "your pet", "your car/house/boat", ... As opposed to _mere binary_ packages, ie strictly optional ego-gratification badly written binaries, things like yet another MUA, yet another music player, yet another id3 editor, wanda the fish or weyes, another cpu load viewer applet, etc? Get of your ivory tower, there is nothing in "content" that makes it magically less suitable than "code" for Fedora purposes (or the reverse) One of the "mere content" examples given in this thread, project Gutemberg, would be massively more useful than a lot of the "code" in Fedora today (if packaged properly) -- Nicolas Mailhot
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