Quote from GasGiant on 09/24/08 at 05:21:05:Sounds like you two have it covered. One less thing for me to lose sleep over
Yeah... You see... I would setup a bug tracker for ISTech tomorrow if I thought that they were going to start using it right then.
They seem to indicate that they, however, do not have the resources to maintain a public facing bug tracker. So setting one up does no good if it's not going to be used.
I'm not entirely opposed to waiting until you get the time to setup what you had talked about doing. That is, if they'll use it. The bug tracker needn't take anywhere near the amount of time to maintain as it takes to debug. It's pretty straight forward really... Bugs are added in an unconfirmed state. The programmers or QA people or whoever check to see if it's really a bug. If so they change the status to confirmed. When they fix it they update the status to fixed. The initial bug reports can even be done by the users. That's how practically ever other tracker I've ever seen works. You give as much detailed info as you can when you report. Some bugs will be marked as non bugs. Existing software already does all of this and more. Evo is not so different from any other software package. This all works on many, many other projects. I've seen projects with one programmer have a bug tracker. How else can the end users and the developers be on the same page?