Various quotes from the Asterisk community
From the CVS
Modified Files:
chan_sip.c
Log Message:
The SIP motto is “There’s More Than One Standard for Doing It”
markster
Modified Files:
chan_sip.c
Log Message:
The SIP motto is “There’s More Than One Standard for Doing It”
markster
John Todd:
If Answer() clears variables, then this is a bug, where “bug” is defined as “behavior that occurs that a reasonable user or developer would not expect given the inputs to the process.”
If Answer() clears variables, then this is a bug, where “bug” is defined as “behavior that occurs that a reasonable user or developer would not expect given the inputs to the process.”
Corydon76:
Beware, though, if you’ve never written a driver, it’s not likely to be an easy task.
on the topic of FreeBSD zaptel drivers in IRC 2003-12-28
Beware, though, if you’ve never written a driver, it’s not likely to be an easy task.
on the topic of FreeBSD zaptel drivers in IRC 2003-12-28
Steven Critchfield, jan 2004:
“Just to prepare you, if you ask the above question, you are not ready to
ask the above question.”
“Just to prepare you, if you ask the above question, you are not ready to
ask the above question.”
Nick Bachman, Jan 4, 2004:
“I remind you that close only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and
nuclear weapons, and not with my users’ uptime :-).”
“I remind you that close only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and
nuclear weapons, and not with my users’ uptime :-).”
tmpm, May 14, 2004 (mailing list) on the topic of Internationalisation and US dialects:
The ones that come to mind are en_ca, where every sentence has an ..eh? ending.
“Our Weasels are eating doughnuts, and drinking beer ..eh?”
much like Aussie en_au which prepends a “G’day mate.. and ends with the ..eh?”
“G’day mate, our weasels be puttin our phone system on the barbie…eh?”
or even to stretch it a bit, Antarctic english….en_an which makes copious use of brr..
“Brrr….our weasles froze to death looking for a phone..Brrr…”
The ones that come to mind are en_ca, where every sentence has an ..eh? ending.
“Our Weasels are eating doughnuts, and drinking beer ..eh?”
much like Aussie en_au which prepends a “G’day mate.. and ends with the ..eh?”
“G’day mate, our weasels be puttin our phone system on the barbie…eh?”
or even to stretch it a bit, Antarctic english….en_an which makes copious use of brr..
“Brrr….our weasles froze to death looking for a phone..Brrr…”
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