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Thank you very much.
 
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Thanks everybody for coming,…
 
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If you are packaging software and you want
me to work on with you,
 
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this is how you can do that.
 
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It is a very self-??? talk:
 
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I just want to explain some of the things
that I like,
 
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some practice that I prefer about Debian
packaging,
 
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and I don't pretend this is any sort of
official,
 
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permanent or final thing.
 
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I just wanted to share some ideas that I
have about the way that I work with
 
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packages, in the hope that maybe, hmm,
for two hopes:
 
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One is that I hope that I can show you
something that you have not heard of,
 
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or maybe you were doing differently,
 
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or maybe you think it is the right think
to do and it is just nice to see somebody
 
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somebody else doing it.
 
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My second hope is that you can tell me
what I am doing wrong,
 
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and you can help me learn and improve
on my own packaging techniques.
 
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If you see something that I am proposing
up here,
 
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and you think there is a problem with it,
I would like to hear about it too.
 
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I just want to see more of the culture
within Debian,
 
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of people who are doing packaging,
explaining what they are doing,
 
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and so I thought I would just step up and
explain:
 
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"Here is some of the practice that I do",
 
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In the hope that other people will do the
same and explain what they are doing,
 
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and maybe they can learn from me and
I can learn from them.
 
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Without much further ????, I am just going
to dive into it.
 
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If you have questions, I am perfectly
happy to be interrupted,
 
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we have some folks with walking mics
in the crowd:
 
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you can just raise your hand.
 
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I you have got a question or an
interruption or whatever,
 
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that is fine.
 
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I ??? I got the whole 15 minutes,
I think there are 20 minutes,
 
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I ??? the whole time, so there will be
also time for questions at the end
 
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if you prefer.
 
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But I do not mind being interrupted.
 
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So, this is all on this web page here,
 
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you could probably skip this talk and go
read the web page,
 
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but then you would not have the nice
??? actions,
 
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and it is easier to tell me that I am
wrong in person,
 
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so I would like to have that happen.
 
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I put this up on the Debian wiki,
 
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because I want anyone to be able to find
it.
 
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If you thing you have got some good ideas,
you should put it on the Debian Wiki too:
 
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other people can take advantage of the
ideas that you have got.
 
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First baseline is: I really like revision
control.
 
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And I know that it makes me a certain
flavor on nerd,
 
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but when we are working with things that
are as complicated as software packages,
 
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hmmm, I think a lot of people don't get
that in Debian we are not just working on
 
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one software package:
 
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you are actually probably, if you are doing
a responsibly work,
 
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on at least two software packages, and
maybe 5.
 
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So you have got the version that is
unstable and you have got
 
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the version that you try to maintain for
stable as well.
 
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And we are committing to doing maintenance
work.
 
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A lot of our work in the project is ???
in nature:
 
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we want to clean up the mess and we want
us to stay out of the way and
 
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to make sure things work, functionally,
 
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for people who are relying on the
operating system to not get in their way.
 
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So revision control I think is really
helpful because it means you can
 
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keep track of what changes