On 12/08/2011 07:01 AM, Atlant Schmidt wrote:
> One use case Stephen didn’t mention is the case where you decide
> to make some sort of global change to the project. (I don’t know if it’s
> true of the Alassian wiki, but) In a pure WYSIWIG system, you’ll get to
> make that change individual
On Thursday 08 December 2011 13:01:43 ext Atlant Schmidt wrote:
> [...] to echo and amplify what Stephen has said:
>
> WYSIWYG editors may be easier for novice wikipedians to use, but
> markup-based editors are far easier for experienced people to use
> and get the results precisely corre
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2011 20:00
To: Jeff Mitchell
Cc: development@qt-project.org
Subject: Re: [Development] Call for Volunteers: SSO-improvements for
qt-project.org
On Wednesday, December 07, 2011 14:23:27 you wrote:
> On 12/7/2011 9:26 AM, Stephen Kelly wrote:
> > The worst t
On 12/07/2011 07:59 PM, Stephen Kelly wrote:
> == with headers like this ==
>
> === and subheaders like this ===
>
>
>
> both for easy copy/pasting into a wiki and because readers (of
> appropriate mailing lists) recognise what it means.
>
>
>
> Try pasting an email like that into confluen
On Wednesday, December 07, 2011 14:23:27 you wrote:
> On 12/7/2011 9:26 AM, Stephen Kelly wrote:
> > The worst thing about Confluence is that it can only be edited in rich
> > text mode. There is no markup behind that which you can switch to in
> > order to edit pages.
>
>
>
> > It is highly frust
On 12/7/2011 9:26 AM, Stephen Kelly wrote:
> The worst thing about Confluence is that it can only be edited in rich
> text mode. There is no markup behind that which you can switch to in
> order to edit pages.
Yes, this is new in Confluence 4.0 (which admittedly I have not used yet).
The reason f
On Wednesday, December 07, 2011 09:03:23 Jeff Mitchell wrote:
> I know that a lot of open source projects will not use any non-FOSS (KDE
> for instance), but my understanding was that Qt uses JIRA because
> although proprietary, it's the best in its class, which makes it very
> useful. Crowd is als
On 12/07/2011 03:54 AM, Robin Burchell wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 7, 2011 at 9:22 AM, wrote:
>> Without entering into the "which is better" debate, Confluence can be used
>> for free for open source projects
>
> I'm not trying to be an alarmist, I do know that, and that is good.
> Props to Atlassian
On 7.12.2011 2:28 AM, "ext Jeff Mitchell" wrote:
>On 12/6/2011 12:57 PM, Daniel Molkentin wrote:
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> to avoid user account fragmentation, we implemented an Single Sign On
>> (SSO) scheme (almost) from the start that 'works' across all the
>> important qt-project.org sites we
On Wed, Dec 7, 2011 at 9:22 AM, wrote:
> Without entering into the "which is better" debate, Confluence can be used
> for free for open source projects
I'm not trying to be an alarmist, I do know that, and that is good.
Props to Atlassian for offering that. I still don't like it. Just
because i
On 07/12/2011, at 5:37 PM, Robin Burchell wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 7, 2011 at 2:28 AM, Jeff Mitchell wrote:
>> At Qt Contributor Day in SF I talked to Alexandra Leisse about
>> MediaWiki. Specifically, she hates MediaWiki, and I suggested moving to
>> Confluence, as it's a much, much, much, much nic
On Wed, Dec 7, 2011 at 2:28 AM, Jeff Mitchell wrote:
> At Qt Contributor Day in SF I talked to Alexandra Leisse about
> MediaWiki. Specifically, she hates MediaWiki, and I suggested moving to
> Confluence, as it's a much, much, much, much nicer wiki than MediaWiki,
I think this is a tiny bit over
On 12/6/2011 12:57 PM, Daniel Molkentin wrote:
> Hello everyone,
>
> to avoid user account fragmentation, we implemented an Single Sign On
> (SSO) scheme (almost) from the start that 'works' across all the
> important qt-project.org sites we have so far:
>
> - codereview.qt-project.org (Gerrit)
>
On Tue, Dec 6, 2011 at 6:57 PM, Daniel Molkentin
wrote:
> An obvious solution is to write Crowd authenticators for the two
> applications, so it doesn't need to happen on the web server level. For
> MediaWiki, somebody already wrote a plugin, which unfortunately is
> broken (for references, see th
Hello everyone,
to avoid user account fragmentation, we implemented an Single Sign On
(SSO) scheme (almost) from the start that 'works' across all the
important qt-project.org sites we have so far:
- codereview.qt-project.org (Gerrit)
- wiki.qt-project.org (MediaWiki)
- bugreports.qt.nokia.com (J
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