By the way, it would be nice to have transcript for this talk, just
like there is for Linus talk:
http://git.or.cz/gitwiki/LinusTalk200705Transcript
(but this would take some doing).
It would be also nice to have slides for the talk available somewhere,
just like slides for "Git Chronicle".
Something like Sam Vilain slides from "perl.git" talk?,
http://utsl.gen.nz/talks/perl-history/slides/
It shouldn't be that hard, depending on the original program the slides
were made... well, it was made in Impress from OpenOffice.org 2.4; it
might have export to (X)HTML + images, and to SWF (Flash presentation).
If I remember correctly there was at least one improvement in rename
detection, namely better talking into account filename similarity score,
so for example similar files moved (or copied) didn't get marked as
coming from one source (and rest deleted).
iGitHub has nothing to do with GitHub; I think you put the comment in
a wrong place; the iGitHub (or iGit / iGitRouter) was a separate talk
in "Lighting Round Talks" next day.
What benefits would be those? Current design of "fire and forget",
which stopped libification efforts till now was used for a reason...
This is not suprising, as Git treats committer and author email data
as opaque data, not analysing it at all (some commits from early
versions of git might not have this data at all, IIRC).
Well, you can workaround this weakness by (ab)using submodules...
...and one should always remember that casual partial checkouts
interfere a bit with whole-tree commits.
--
Jakub Narebski
Poland
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