On Oct 4, 5:41 pm, "James Bennett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If the ticket was closed by a lead developer, and the decision has so
> far survived many other people begging and pleading on the mailing
> list, it's a safe bet that continuing that process is not likely to
> lead to a favorable out
On Oct 4, 3:15 pm, Malcolm Tredinnick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> This is now just getting rude.
>
> There are over 700 open bugs. If nobody is against fixing them, why are
> they still open? Why hasn't anything happened yet? The horrors! Oh,
> wait, maybe it's that thing where we take small, reg
If no one is against this, why hasn't anything happened yet?
If Jacob, or anyone else, is against it, I wish they would step
forward and say so. Perhaps even argue as to why.
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That is really good. Thanks :)
On Sep 19, 1:44 pm, Ned Batchelder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I agree that a favicon is one of those fit-and-finish touches that helps
> complete a website. Attached are my attempts. I agree with Todd that
> "dj" is a better reminder of Django, and the color sho
On Sep 17, 3:33 pm, Dave <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sep 15, 10:22 pm, Mikkel Høgh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > To illustrate my point, take a look at this image, a screenshot of a
> > very normal Firefox tab bar of
> > mine:http://mikkel.hoegh.org/g
Well, I do that all the time, and I know that there are others like
me :)
It's a part of my GTD thing. Instead of having my RSS-reader grow to
hundreds (even thousands) of unread posts, I go through it all
frequently and open everything worth reading in a new tab. If I don't
manage to get it read
I'm new to Django (recently converted from TurboGears), and the first
real flaw I've managed to find in my use of Django is actually a
rather insignificant one.
I'm talking about the lack of a favicon on Django's websites (apart
from Django's trac instance, which uses the trac favicon.)
Before f