Patrick,
Correct on the dates. Yes Keisuke started
opencobol.org,
and I now have keys. The ad banner pretty much pays for the
hosting, bills still to Keisuke. We won't likely be patching
Xoops if that is what you mean. Activity has moved to
SourceForge and I'm partly to blame for letting
opencobol.org
sit in the position it is in. It needs to be set readonly,
with a page stating so. Don't want to. Should. If it can
cause confusion, it needs to be rectified. Don't want to.
Frickin' spam bots.
The list has always been through SourceForge. The project
was registered on the Forge back in 2001. And yeah
opencobol.org
went into mothball after spambots took over the place.
Insidious comment spam accumulated for years, then eventually
the database engine couldn't feed the spider bots fast enough.
Humans rarely looked at the pages that had the spam, but the
google bots did. And it tripped up the system. Cleaning it
up became a hassle that none of the principals could afford
time to struggle with. It's now in mothball, but not really
marked as such, other than a forum post. SourceForge manages
the robot account requests, we breath easy and get on with
COBOL and not sweeping poop off the web.
I don't like to pester Keisuke, but he is always open when
needs be. Bernard can pull some strings when necessary as
well.
For now, I'm ignoring duties at amping down good old
opencobol.org
while trying to stay on top of Admin and mod duties on the
Forge, with Simon doing more than his fair share. Simon is
also managing the SVN source code tree and has the keys to
commit privileges. I posted up a 1.1CE tarball, Simon was
wise enough to version the filename, so I'm glad there are
professionals around.
There will be spurts and pauses in CE commits. The Open
COBOL Consortium in Japan will be offering some changes, and
there are some major contributions that will need to be merged
in sooner rather than later. A note has been sent to FSF and
GNU, and it is likely time to pester them again about issues
surrounding copyright transfers, which was Roger's plan last
time we spoke of it, (umm a fair to long time ago now).
Simon has a contrib directory in the SVN source tree for
anyone that wants to get involved without getting into deep
compiler sources. Yayy Wumpus.
For now and the forseeable future, SourceForge is the home
Patrick.
Cheers,
Brian