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On 11/01/2015 04:23 AM, Chris Murphy wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 28, 2015 at 5:11 PM, Dan Mossor <danofsatx(a)gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> I'm with Simo. I *DO NOT* want to place a burden on a FOSS
>> operating system to be 100% compatible with non-FOSS software.
>
> OK well seeing as we even have some issues with FOSS software A
> not getting along with FOSS software B and there's no burden...
>
> The question is: should Cockpit have a bug that prevents it from
> being functional with OSX+Chrome, should it be blocking? What if
> it's OSX+Firefox?
>
> I would say a more practical, and permissive policy would be:
> should Cockpit have a bug that prevents it from being functional
> with OSX or Windows using any (Chrome, FireFox, or OS default) then
> it's a blocking bug. The point is to make sure a Cockpit bug
> doesn't prevent people on other OS's from using Cockpit and thus
> benefiting.
>
That's a fairly reasonable statement. So something like:
* All Cockpit functional criteria must be satisfied when the user is
running any of the following blocking browsers:
- Mozilla Firefox as shipped in the same Fedora release
- At least one of a) Mozilla Firefox or b) Google Chrome of the latest
available version on Windows at compose time.
- At least one of a) Mozilla Firefox or b) Google Chrome of the latest
available version on OSX at compose time.
Would that be satisfactory to everyone?
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