huzzah!
Originele bericht
Onderwerp: [Wine (a project of Software Freedom Conservancy)] Your
organization application has been accepted.
Datum: Fri, 16 Mar 2012 17:44:28 +
Van:no-re...@google-melange.appspotmail.com
Aan:m.b.lankho...@gmail.com
Your
The real way to mount a revolt, of course, would be to
fork wine and maintain a better version of it. The
likelihood of that ever happening seems slim, but
perhaps in 15 years, after HTML 5 takes over and users
no longer run win32 apps, it's possible that something
like that would happen naturally
> As I said, our overlords are kind and benevolent and I'm sure that the
> mention of "evil plans" was simply a joke as such wise and noble
> developers could need harbor a malevolent thought. But, unless I've
> been misreading this mailing list, all patches have to go through our
> current enlight
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 1:27 PM, Juan Lang wrote:
> Hi Michael,
>
>> Not that I have any problems with our benevolent overlords, and not
>> that I would likely achieve franchise with a scant 2 patches under my
>> belt, but I can't help wondering how such a revolt would succeed
>> seeing as the only
Hi Michael,
> Not that I have any problems with our benevolent overlords, and not
> that I would likely achieve franchise with a scant 2 patches under my
> belt, but I can't help wondering how such a revolt would succeed
> seeing as the only method to achieve franchise-hood is controlled by
> the
would be revolting against.
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 4:30 PM, Jeremy White wrote:
> Hi Folks,
>
> I try to send out a periodic message to the wine-devel mailing list
> outlining the 'corporate' structure of Wine and how some decisions are made.
>
> We work with the So
Hi Folks,
I try to send out a periodic message to the wine-devel mailing list
outlining the 'corporate' structure of Wine and how some decisions are made.
We work with the Software Freedom Conservancy. They manage the pieces
of Wine that benefit from a formal organization, such a
Hi folks,
As you may recall, several years ago, we decided to work with the
Software Freedom Conservancy to ask them to manage aspects of Wine that
merited the shield of a formal organization.
They have been great, and a great improvement over our former process.
I thought I'd send an emai
On 3/31/06, Jeremy White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Anyone else have any objections or other thoughts on it?My $.02 is that it's necessary. Last year I had a chance for someone local to make a donation but they needed to do it to a registered 501c3 organization. Well, the money ended up going to
Hi,
On Fri, Mar 31, 2006 at 10:29:50PM -0800, Scott Ritchie wrote:
> On Fri, 2006-03-31 at 21:48 -0600, Jeremy White wrote:
> > Anyone else have any objections or other thoughts on it?
>
> Let's remember that it's not just firms like Google that could give "the
> Wine project" money. Wine has so
Hi,
On 4/1/06, Scott Ritchie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A while back I began seriously thinking about the possibility of
> nonprofit status and began researching into all sorts of grants and
> fundraising sources that Wine could potentially tap. Needless to say,
> now I have reason to dig up my
On Fri, 2006-03-31 at 21:48 -0600, Jeremy White wrote:
> Anyone else have any objections or other thoughts on it?
Let's remember that it's not just firms like Google that could give "the
Wine project" money. Wine has some serious potential value for a whole
lot of people - scientists, governments
Jeremy White wrote:
No objection from me.. Although, I should mention that I haven't seen
much in the way of a link to donate to the project. Theres no link on
the main page anywhere that I can see. Perhaps the fund would be a
little bigger if it was easier to find a donate link?
Hmm.
I'd like to start a separate thread on this subject, so
we don't lose the chance to discuss this.
I think it's a really good idea for us to join.
Right now, I manage the finances for 'The Wine Project'.
The money literally flows into my personal bank account;
I registered a 'Doing Business As' (D
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