[Debbits-commit] [debbits] 01/01: fix publication date, remove trailing spaces

Ana Beatriz Guerrero López ana at alioth.debian.org
Mon Oct 14 21:49:28 UTC 2013


This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script.

ana pushed a commit to branch master
in repository debbits.

commit bf13dfabb4e4835b63ea5027e170143bab93662c
Author: Ana Beatriz Guerrero López <ana at ekaia.org>
Date:   Mon Oct 14 23:49:36 2013 +0200

    fix publication date, remove trailing spaces
---
 content/2013/ada-lovelace-day.md |   34 +++++++++++++++++-----------------
 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)

diff --git a/content/2013/ada-lovelace-day.md b/content/2013/ada-lovelace-day.md
index 0d33fac..8b794fd 100644
--- a/content/2013/ada-lovelace-day.md
+++ b/content/2013/ada-lovelace-day.md
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
 Title: Ada Lovelace Day: meet some of the "women behind Debian"!
-Date: 2013-10-1 00:00
+Date: 2013-10-15 00:01
 Tags: ada lovelace day, debian women, diversity
-Slug: ada-lovelace-day 
+Slug: ada-lovelace-day
 Author: Ana Guerrero Lopez and Francesca Ciceri
-Status: published 
+Status: published
 
 Today is [Ada Lovelace](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_Lovelace) Day:
 
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ Enjoy!
 
 ##Ana Guerrero Lopez (ana)
 
-*Who are you?*  
+*Who are you?*
 
 I'm a 30-something years old geek. I'm from Andalusia, Spain but live in France.
 
@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ focus my translation work on Debian.
 
 ##Christine Caulfield
 
-*Who are you?*  
+*Who are you?*
 
 My name is Christine Caulfield. My day job is principal software
 engineer at Red Hat working on the cluster infrastructure components
@@ -75,15 +75,15 @@ corosync & pacemaker. Outside computing I'm a musician and sound
 engineer. I play violin with lots of technology attached, and love
 avant garde music.
 
-*What do you do in Debian?*  
-  
+*What do you do in Debian?*
+
 I'm not that active on Debian any more due to pressure of time, and
 maturity of the packages I work on. I currently maintain the,
 little-used, DECnet userspace packages and the, even less used I
 suspect, mopd bootloader. I used to maintain lvm2 for a while but
 dropped that a few years ago.
 
-*How and why did you start contributing to Debian?*  
+*How and why did you start contributing to Debian?*
 
 My initial reasons for joining Debian were slightly selfish, to find a
 home for the DECnet project that I was heavily involved in at the
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ time. I was a keep Debian user and people wanted a distribution where
 the software was easy to set up. DECnet is quite complicated for users
 to configure, being a totally independant networking stack to IP
 and so OS support is needed. Debian seemed like the logical place to
-make this happen.  
+make this happen.
 As mentioned above I got quite involved for a time and maintained
 other packages too. I picked up lvm2 because I was on the lvm2 dev
 team at work in Red Hat and as it was a new package at that time I
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ seemed a logical choice.
 
 ##Elena Grandi (valhalla)
 
-*Who are you?* 
+*Who are you?*
 
 I'm a 30-something years old geek and Free Software enthusiast
 from Italy.
@@ -121,24 +121,24 @@ Debian stable on the home server and in chroots.
 I was already doing marginal contributions to those distributions,
 where finding stuff that was missing was easy, but my perception
 as a stable user was that Debian was already working fine and probably
-didn't really need any help.  
+didn't really need any help.
 Then I started to socialize on IRC with some DDs and DMs, and
 realized that my perception was superficial and that in reality
 there were dark holes in the depths of the archive where Evil
-festered and prospered and... ok, sorry, I got carried away :)  
+festered and prospered and... ok, sorry, I got carried away :)
 Anyway, since I was actually using Debian more and more
 I decided to start contributing: I read documentation, I attended
 the useful IRC sessions on #debian-women and decided that it was
 probably best not to add new stuff, but look for things that
 I used and that needed help. Then nothing happened for a while,
 because finding stuff that doesn't work *is hard* (at least
-on my mostly textual systems).  
+on my mostly textual systems).
 Then one day I was trying to write a python script that needed
 to verify gpg signed messages; it had to run on my Debian server,
 so I was trying to use python-pyme and its documentation
 was painful to use, while I remembered an earlier attempt
 using python-gnupg that was much more pythonic, but not available
-in Debian.  
+in Debian.
 In a fit of anger I decided to forgo all of my good intentions and
 actually add a new package: I checked the sources for problems,
 packaged, sent it to mentors at d-o, got reviews, fixed problems,
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ resent and finally got sponsored and well, everything started.
 
 *Who are you?*
 
-I'm Francesca, a 30-something Italian graduated in Social Sciences. 
+I'm Francesca, a 30-something Italian graduated in Social Sciences.
 
 *What do you do in Debian?*
 
@@ -194,7 +194,7 @@ of the community even when I was not contributing yet.
 
 ##Mònica Ramírez Arceda (monica)
 
-*Who are you?* 
+*Who are you?*
 
 My name is Mònica Ramírez Arceda and I am an enthusiast of free software
 and sharing knowledge cultures: for me it's a kind of philosophy of
@@ -221,7 +221,7 @@ collectives and friends in technical stuff (from installing Debian to
 developing some helping apps for them)... but two years ago I was
 looking forward to join a free software project and I decided to try
 Debian, since it has been my first and only distro in my day-to-day life
-for about ten years.  
+for about ten years.
 So, I wanted to give back Debian all what it had offered to me, but....
 I thought I couldn't (hey, Debian is for real hackers, not for you
 little ant!), but I started to adopt some orphaned packages, do some QA

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