On Tue, 15 Feb, 2005 at 10:02PM +1000, Mark Constable spake thus: > james@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > >>Perhaps http://opensrc.org could be useful. > > > >I was thinking more of a mailing list - something that's active rather than > >passive (things drop into my mailbox rather than me going and looking > >to see what's happening). > > I find a Wiki is good compromise between a free flowing > mailing-list and some web based portal. One only has to > check one URL which could be an RSS feed quite easily... > > http://opensrc.org/?page=RecentChanges > > >>>Another thing I'd like to see would be people willing to post unmixed > >>>audio. I'd love to play around with this track myself - not that I > >>>think I'd do a better job than you have, but just for the experience > >>>of doing it. > > This is awkward in a mailing-list which is why these sites > are linked to from the Wiki at opensrc.org, so that a user > can upload large ogg/flac or mp3 files via ftp, for example.. > > http://esm.opensrc.org I can see that this is a good idea. I wasn't intending to head down that road quite as far, though. I just meant that if I expressed an interest in playing with someone elses track, I could ask and get sent the raw audio. Less formal. I like the opensrc idea though, it's just different. > -- "I'd crawl over an acre of 'Visual This++' and 'Integrated Development That' to get to gcc, Emacs, and gdb. Thank you." (By Vance Petree, Virginia Power)