If they implement it and it succeed, someone will eventually collide the stats and come out with this brilliant idea : why not prevent the crime and censor this dangerous information in the first place ? Observation precedes prevention.
This could sounds perfectly like a "déjà view"; since everyone have seen a source development tree, a commit board, a bug traker and a mainstream development team.
But how much did and still do i have fun sending my friends or job partners a fresh, newly and not already "main stream" released piece of software. Release candidate at least would you say ? Absolutly not ! CVS tree or close friends little projects. Thats it !
With Gentoo, i can point them to a local ebuild that would do the fetch and build job for them. I can point them to every piece of code i liked or find usefull on the net ; they can easily add their touch/patch on my ebuild/source or they can easily uninstall whatever ive sent them they decided to install.
It's the beauty of ebuild. And this is one great feature of Gentoo. Many other features like this one build up the Gentoo world.
No doubt that the free speech relations was built upon those kind of features: share, get feedbacks, make up your opinion, build up feedbacks then share again. This is what i easily achieve with Gentoo system.
So not only do i say thanks to Daniel for bringing me a "maintened" linux source tree, but i also say him a specially thanks for bringing me an easy way to share idea.
If they implement it and it succeed, someone will eventually collide the stats and come out with this brilliant idea : why not prevent the crime and censor this dangerous information in the first place ? Observation precedes prevention.
But how much did and still do i have fun sending my friends or job partners a fresh, newly and not already "main stream" released piece of software. Release candidate at least would you say ? Absolutly not ! CVS tree or close friends little projects. Thats it !
With Gentoo, i can point them to a local ebuild that would do the fetch and build job for them. I can point them to every piece of code i liked or find usefull on the net ; they can easily add their touch/patch on my ebuild/source or they can easily uninstall whatever ive sent them they decided to install. It's the beauty of ebuild. And this is one great feature of Gentoo. Many other features like this one build up the Gentoo world. No doubt that the free speech relations was built upon those kind of features: share, get feedbacks, make up your opinion, build up feedbacks then share again. This is what i easily achieve with Gentoo system.
So not only do i say thanks to Daniel for bringing me a "maintened" linux source tree, but i also say him a specially thanks for bringing me an easy way to share idea.