Project hosting application for Funny Talk

Jacob Joaquin jacobjoaquin at gmail.com
Tue Apr 1 17:09:16 EDT 2008


1. Project name             : Funny Talk

2. Existing website, if any : http://www.thumbuki.com/xo/funnytalk.activity.zip

3. One-line description     : Record your voice with the built-in
microphone, and alter the sound using effects such as chorus, reverb,
echo, etc.

4. Longer description       : A Csound-based activity that children
can use to record their voices with the built-in microphone, and
process them with effects such as reverb, echo, chorus, etc. Funny
Talk allows users to save their manipulated voices as soundfiles so
that they can be used in other musical activities.  This activity uses
the csndsugui toolkit.

5. URLs of similar projects : http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Csound#Activities

6. Committer list

      Username        Full name       SSH2 key URL       E-mail
      --------        ---------       ------------       ------
   #1 Jacob Joaquin   Jacob Joaquin   Attached as file   jacobjoaquin at gmail.com


7. Preferred development model

   [X] Central tree. Every developer can push his changes directly to the
       project's git tree. This is the standard model that will be familiar to
       CVS and Subversion users, and that tends to work well for most projects.

   [ ] Maintainer-owned tree. Every developer creates his own git tree, or
       multiple git trees. He periodically asks the maintainer to look at one
       or more of these trees, and merge changes into the maintainer-owned,
       "main" tree. This is the model used by the Linux kernel, and is
       well-suited to projects wishing to maintain a tighter control on code
       entering the main tree.

   If you choose the maintainer-owned tree model, but wish to set up some
   shared trees where all of your project's committers can commit directly,
   as might be the case with a "discussion" tree, or a tree for an individual
   feature, you may send us such a request by e-mail, and we will set up the
   tree for you.

8. Set up a project mailing list:

   [ ] Yes, named after our project name
   [ ] Yes, named ______________________
   [X] No

   When your project is just getting off the ground, we suggest you eschew
   a separate mailing list and instead keep discussion about your project
   on the main OLPC development list. This will give you more input and
   potentially attract more developers to your project; when the volume of
   messages related to your project reaches some critical mass, we can
   trivially create a separate mailing list for you.

   If you need multiple lists, let us know. We discourage having many
   mailing lists for smaller projects, as this tends to
   stunt the growth of your project community. You can always add more lists
   later.

9. Commit notifications

   [ ] Notification of commits to the main tree should be e-mailed to the list
       we chose to create above
   [ ] A separate mailing list, <projectname>-git, should be created for commit
       notifications
   [X] No commit notifications, please

10. Shell accounts

   As a general rule, we don't provide shell accounts to developers unless
   there's a demonstrated need. If you have one, please explain here, and
   list the usernames of the committers above needing shell access.

11. Translation
   [X] Set up the laptop.org Pootle server to allow translation
commits to be made
   [ ] Translation arrangements have already been made at _______________

12. Notes/comments:
none
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