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Author: pierrot
Date:  
To: dynebolic mailinglist
Subject: Re: [dyne:bolic] RASTASOFT operating system - dyne:II GNU/Linux 2.5.2DHORUBA - final release
Hi all
I would like to help for dyne3 in my field and have some ideas about
collaborative tools that could be included in the core of the next dyne
Is there a wiki structured page for dyne3 where people could drop their
ideas?

I think dyne needs more that a "fourre-tout" mailing liste for the mass and
some private discussions for a happy few,
I am today frustrated with some stuff on dyne and I dont see any change for
the past 5 years :

a dyne cookbook : recipes, videos , tutorials ,
a good knowledge database : most of my past and futur questions have been
answered previously in the mailing liste but since the mailing list cant be
consulted, all good ideas and recipes are lost.
I have on two different mail adresses all the past 5 years mailing list , a
little magical script could parse all of that and generate a doc and a
search engine (25 perl lines for a good perl coder (I am a bad perl coder,
so I would do 50 )

more technical :
the dyne core should evolve with its users in a social way, if I need my
ndiswrapper and compile it and include it as a patch in the dyne3 core, that
would be cool to include that as an experimental version of dyne that would
update itself automatically for experimental users, some kind of self
growing core ,

I have been working in AI for 5 years on peer2peer, social interaction, user
feedback , image recognition and other stuff, I think it would be an
excellent opportunity "d'envoyer du gros" to implement some new features on
dyne3


last thing, you should check on tagtool.org, I am building one at the moment
, I am sure the excellent nodekit software could be ported on dyne and would
love to make friend with pure data,

Cheers to all to you happy hackers




On Tue, Apr 8, 2008 at 8:32 AM, Carsten Agger <agger@???> wrote:

> jaromil <jaromil@???> wrote:
>
> > I use Emacs as an editor, which provides 'ctags' and 'ebrowse' for
> > such purpose. I don't really use it a lot (takes time to get used to
> > the keys), anyway ctags is comfortable.
> >
> > Most programmers i know use Vim and that has also a similar
> > extension,
> > i think is called 'cmode'.
> >
>
> I normally use Vim with ctags, and I use it a lot - it's really handy,
> once you get used to it (the default is Ctrl-Alt-] to follow a tag and
> Ctrl-T to go back, but in gvim you can also use Ctrl+LMB).
>
> There's another program called "cscope" which can also tell you where a
> function is called and let you choose between implementation and declaration
> of functions, etc., but for me, ctags is normally fine to navigate the code.
>
> GNU global I haven't tried, but according to the description it looks
> fine.
>
> br
> Carsten
>
> --
> http://www.modspil.dk
> _______________________________________________
> dynebolic mailing list
> dynebolic@???
> http://lists.dyne.org/mailman/listinfo/dynebolic
>




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