Re: Migrating to github

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Zohar Jackson_1

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Nov 11, 2015, 9:15:07 AM11/11/15
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I think that's about it. The only other thing you should do is update this page with a big headline to let people know the project has been moved to github.


On Wednesday, November 11, 2015 at 3:10:58 AM UTC+2, Oliver wrote:
If you don't mind, let's continue this discussion on pypubsub_dev (https://groups.google.com/d/forum/pypubsub_dev).

Other than creating the readme that I want users to see when they go to the github pypubsub homepage, there isn't much else to do, is there? The docs are on readthedocs.org, and the file releases have to be moved to pypi ASAP. Let me know if I'm missing anything. 

Cheers, 
Oliver

On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 4:45 AM, Zohar Jackson <zo...@turinggroup.com> wrote:
Oh Nice! I missed that. I guess I meant that that the master repository, project home, documentation etc should be hosted on Github. SourceForge is a dying site that instantly reduces the credibility of a project. 

The main reason I bring this up is because when SourceForge went down a few months ago it recked havoc on my project that uses PyPubSub as I was unable to install new instances of the application.  Also if the project is hosted on Github developers are much more likely to contribute.

Either way thanks again for producing this awesome library, if you want help migrating to GitHub let me know. 



--
Oliver
Open Source contributions: PyPubSub, Lua-iCxxiof
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Oliver

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Nov 12, 2015, 10:52:17 PM11/12/15
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I can certainly manage that. Won't be immediately but I'm hoping to update to Python 3.5 and make a couple of minor improvements including pypi hosting of releases, I'll do the source migration to github then. Thanks, 
Oliver
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