From mint-bounce@lists.fishpool.fi Fri Oct 10 14:16:45 2008 DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=gmail.com; s=gamma; h=domainkey-signature:received:received:message-id:date:from :organization:user-agent:mime-version:to:cc:subject:references :in-reply-to:content-type:content-transfer-encoding; bh=NP0P9Zs8NhEzsa/0w/0Jgr32hsvw7IK66Hr5Jl04MPg=; b=R312WkCA+Q7RJ2wkwmeZXYhJSRnfvn3VFMdPCWuUpG1jg+BurkChQWEhUi+cPR9itz ztw1JW9Lc3PIyXXGUEOM7t2RpR0ntQ9YrmsxHbpwDHm4g3mAuSplN5NVYRw62VUEZogp y2jAckiymoljya8fEm/uTX6W3hj48ZSpMCuLQ= DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; c=nofws; d=gmail.com; s=gamma; h=message-id:date:from:organization:user-agent:mime-version:to:cc :subject:references:in-reply-to:content-type :content-transfer-encoding; b=Tcliz6pUbjx69NpJUfWVXV4InJkrZ5QqeUIrwRsqOYrULs4sSoo8qN1+FPcsZXu4Wv G2/2DhJw/CJo+lYtb829VX4cueN8LRPf7ZQEdlJt7lZUBFWI9oPwEzqY6K1PE21uPlxM buWI4JwsiIPnqBD09wGx66tFv0yq+UWH/UC7w= Message-ID: <48EF9B1C.1090204@gmail.com> Date: Fri, 10 Oct 2008 20:12:44 +0200 From: Miro Kropacek Organization: Mystic Bytes User-Agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.17 (X11/20080925) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: "J. F. Lemaire" CC: mint@lists.fishpool.fi Subject: Re: [MiNT] Some comments on gcc 4.3.2 References: <20081010123824.03e0a925.mandin.patrice@orange.fr> <200810101714.03064.jflemaire@skynet.be> In-Reply-To: <200810101714.03064.jflemaire@skynet.be> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-15; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-ecartis-version: Ecartis v1.0.0 Sender: mint-bounce@lists.fishpool.fi Errors-to: mint-bounce@lists.fishpool.fi X-original-sender: miro.kropacek@gmail.com Precedence: bulk List-help: List-unsubscribe: List-Id: X-List-ID: List-subscribe: List-owner: List-post: > I wouldn't mind helping with that, now that my 100Mhz/512Mb Falcon has > proper access to the Internet. > The problem isn't performance power, I was talking about cross compiling so every build was matter of seconds, 1-2 minutes at max. The problem for me was that boring work around -- setting right directories, scripts, flags, comments, patch order, maintaining all this etc... when you look at the real count of people able to do it I think it's out of question there's a chance to produce more than 20-30 full-tested-and-working RPMs before everyone gets bored ;-) -- MiKRO / Mystic Bytes http://mikro.atari.org