There is Eclipse plugin for Bazaar but it's not so good. It became the reason I finally tried git. That's not Bazaar's fault.
To me git is a DVCS with attitude. Many git users I know seem pretty fucking proud of themselves for using git, I don't know why. That's not git's fault.
Now that I tried, I really like git, but I will stick with Bazaar unless at times when I really need the Eclipse plugin.
The bottom line is, they are the ones who approached you, because they want you. You should realize you are in the strong position here, and be the one who dictates the terms.
Granted, a compromise will be necessary, as always. But be the one to draw the line. Get a grip and decide the values you don't want to give up. Make a fair offer and let them take it or leave it.
If you are really good, you have nothing to worry about. Either they will accept your terms or another opportunity will present itself to you, sooner or later.
If you are not really that good, they will figure out in time, and you will not be better off.
Dictate the terms, but be fair. Remember that you have nothing to lose.
not much better than NIS?
if it was exactly the same as NIS but with encryption, it would already be far better than NIS.
assuming of course that deployments use ldaps:/// and forbid ldap:///
(why would anybody use ldap:/// aside from debugging?)
There is Eclipse plugin for Bazaar but it's not so good. It became the reason I finally tried git. That's not Bazaar's fault. To me git is a DVCS with attitude. Many git users I know seem pretty fucking proud of themselves for using git, I don't know why. That's not git's fault. Now that I tried, I really like git, but I will stick with Bazaar unless at times when I really need the Eclipse plugin.
The bottom line is, they are the ones who approached you, because they want you. You should realize you are in the strong position here, and be the one who dictates the terms.
Granted, a compromise will be necessary, as always. But be the one to draw the line. Get a grip and decide the values you don't want to give up. Make a fair offer and let them take it or leave it.
If you are really good, you have nothing to worry about. Either they will accept your terms or another opportunity will present itself to you, sooner or later.
If you are not really that good, they will figure out in time, and you will not be better off.
Dictate the terms, but be fair. Remember that you have nothing to lose.
not much better than NIS? if it was exactly the same as NIS but with encryption, it would already be far better than NIS. assuming of course that deployments use ldaps:/// and forbid ldap:/// (why would anybody use ldap:/// aside from debugging?)