Timothy Wilson said: > Using CVS would be great from my perspective, being the one who hands out > access to those who are interested in developing things for our site. I've > never really had the occasion to learn how to use CVS, but I'm confident > that it would be no big deal. Yeah, if you're able to run a decent *nix system, learning the basic, daily-usage CVS commands should be dead easy. > The prospect of having to hold others' hands, > however, is frightening. True. > Is there a *really* easy way to manage CVS checkouts, commits, etc. from > Win9x? If so, I would consider playing around with it for some of the > developers around here. I know there's WinCVS, but I've never bothered trying to figure it out. (I'm the Linux guy in a shop full of Windows programmers.) Of the Windows guys, the one who uses CVS most consistently prefers to just open a command prompt and use the command-line CVS interface, so I don't know what that says about WinCVS's usability... -- "Two words: Windows survives." - Craig Mundie, Microsoft senior strategist "So does syphillis. Good thing we have penicillin." - Matthew Alton Geek Code 3.1: GCS d- s+: a- C++ UL++$ P+>+++ L+++>++++ E- W--(++) N+ o+ !K w---$ O M- V? PS+ PE Y+ PGP t 5++ X+ R++ tv b+ DI++++ D G e* h+ r++ y+ --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: tclug-list-unsubscribe at mn-linux.org For additional commands, e-mail: tclug-list-help at mn-linux.org