![]() ![]() I was not shown documentation of what Mike had done. When he was shown the documentation of what Z had done and why Z was paid for it, he was unable or unwilling to drop the matter “Work on 'bookmark tab' feature (#2368) Work on 'copy hashtags into reply' (#3013) Work on 'positional substitution format' (#3297)”, #125597.“Second invoice submission to Tusky”, #123650.“First invoice submission to Tusky”, #129964.The three invoices actually said (in their entirety): I was asking why the invoice showed a payment for work that was demonstrably not done.Įven if Mike's contract was for time, not specific results, the invoice should have reflected that. I was not asking for documentation for decision making around Mike's hiring. Tusky Contributor response to Nik Clayton Nik would have expected to find documentation of the decision to hire Z, but in this case would not have been able to do so because the hiring predates our current project documentation process. ![]() Given the volume of trivially provable lies the project's contributors made in the statement they produced I leave it to you to decide how trustworthy the remainder of their comments are. I have not addressed every statement made by the project in what follows. You might want to read that first, or have it open in another window. To allay those concerns the full discussion is archived at chat.md. You may be reasonably concerned that the following selectively quotes from the discussion. ![]() See also Update #3 on “Stepping back” and Update #4 on “Stepping back” This is the last of a collection of posts that do that, or otherwise respond to the public statement by the Tusky team. It is my responsibility to present evidence for that. In Update #2 on “Stepping back” I alleged that some of the public statements by the Tusky project, prompted by Stepping back from the Tusky project, were lies. Final entry: Update #5 on “Stepping back”. ![]() Update #5 on “Stepping back” September 17, 2023Įdit to add this set of links to the posts in the series Move “Clear notifications” to a menu to make it more difficult to trigger accidentallyĭownload Pachli from Google Play and F-Droid.Determine the default theme (light or dark) from your Android settings, not hardcoded to “dark”.Show server error messages, making it easier to understand why an operation failed.Search text is not deleted when you move between search tabs.Images don’t “stick” when you zoom or swipe between them.No more missing posts Tusky and other apps can miss posts from your timeline, Pachli always shows the full timeline.Posts from accounts on exclusive lists only appear in the list, not your home timeline A new media player component, supporting more video formats.Choose from a range of accessible fonts.View trending posts and links from your server.Your reading position in a timeline is always preserved.As you scroll through your feed new posts transparently load in the background Pachli includes many changes from Tusky 23.0, including: The application is a rapidly iterating fork of the popular Tusky Mastodon client, branched from version 23.0 of that application. Pachli-the-association is intended to provide a first class organisation to manage the development of the application under the 7 cooperative principles: If you’re familiar with Tusky then you’ll love Pachli. Pachli-the-application is a best-in-class open source Android application for Mastodon and Mastodon-like servers. Pachli is an application (now) and an association (aspirational). # Pachli ( website, google play, f-droid, github, mastodon) After recent events and looking at the existing open source Android Mastodon clients I decided there's space for one more, with a specific focus. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |