That sucks, I like your blog and I usually like Planet Debian too. But if they start making Blogs disappearing, i’ll probably stop using Planet Debian.
I have also appreciated reading what you have to say on planet debian. I think especially the Progeny centric posts relates more to Debian then the other stuff you post. Then again, I like reading John Fleck’s entries on planet gnome. :)
But it’s not such a big deal. I can just subscribe to another feed.
The person who removed Ian is a Canonical employee, and he himself has plugged Canonical/Ubuntu in postings that appeared on Planet Debian, as have many others (not that there’s anything wrong with that, but the same rules should apply to all). A cynic might wonder whether Ian’s real offense was to say something negative about keybuk’s employer.
A Long Time Debian User
Who ever removed Ian needs to be tarred and feathered. If it wasn’t for Ian, the founder of Debian, the “Canonical employee” wouldn’t even be working with Ubentu/Debian GNU/Linux! I have removed my account from Debian Planet in protest.
That sucks, I like your blog and I usually like Planet Debian too. But if they start making Blogs disappearing, i’ll probably stop using Planet Debian.
Perhaps a hooded integrist with swirl tattoos from debian-legal zapped ya… :)
Check Joey’s Blog.
cvs log:
revision 1.19
date: 2005/04/29 22:47:33; author: keybuk; state: Exp; lines: +32 -2
remove imurdock, from many complaints
Maybe ubuntu/canonical is the only commercial debian derivative which is acceptable on pdo..
I have also appreciated reading what you have to say on planet debian. I think especially the Progeny centric posts relates more to Debian then the other stuff you post. Then again, I like reading John Fleck’s entries on planet gnome. :)
But it’s not such a big deal. I can just subscribe to another feed.
I can
The person who removed Ian is a Canonical employee, and he himself has plugged Canonical/Ubuntu in postings that appeared on Planet Debian, as have many others (not that there’s anything wrong with that, but the same rules should apply to all). A cynic might wonder whether Ian’s real offense was to say something negative about keybuk’s employer.
Who ever removed Ian needs to be tarred and feathered. If it wasn’t for Ian, the founder of Debian, the “Canonical employee” wouldn’t even be working with Ubentu/Debian GNU/Linux! I have removed my account from Debian Planet in protest.
Pingback: Linux@blogweb.de