Hi, Simply because: - first it is already in Debian and needs a maintainer; - secondly, I think freemind is a nice piece of software and it works for me. I someone needs more modulair software then freeplane is the choise. - third: freeplane adds an additional 52MB extra (java) software. So why should I need that?
If someone can work with Gedit, why install Libreoffice? ;) Just my 2 cts On Sat, 2013-02-09 at 14:08 +0100, Reinhard Tartler wrote: > On Sat, Feb 9, 2013 at 11:49 AM, Willem van den Akker > <wvdak...@wilsoft.nl> wrote: > > Package: wnpp > > Severity: normal > > X-Debbugs-CC: debian-de...@lists.debian.org > > > > I am using this package a lot and like to (co) maintain. > > I have good experiences in C, some less in Java but that wont be > > a problem because I can catch up fast. > > Can you please elaborate why you think that we need both freemind and > freeplane in Debian? Quoting from > http://freeplane.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page: > > Freeplane was created because of problems with the popular open source > mind mapping program Freemind. Freeplane has been refactored from > Freemind to make its code and packages more modular, make it easier > for new software developers to contribute to Freeplane development, > and to release new versions of Freeplane more often. > > Cheers, > Reinhard >
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