Hi, 1. Identification & Account Data -------------------------------- First name: Thorvald Last name: Natvig Key fingerprint: F891 9C6A 91DC 3A35 AE1C C0BF F09B 1EED DEBA 6F3E Account: thorvald Forward email: thorvald@natvig.com ID check passed, key signed by 1 existing developer: Output from keycheck.sh: pub 1024D/DEBA6F3E 2000-07-14 Key fingerprint = F891 9C6A 91DC 3A35 AE1C C0BF F09B 1EED DEBA 6F3E uid Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> sig! 52B7487E 2009-03-12 Steinar H. Gunderson <sesse@debian.org> sig! DEBA6F3E 2000-07-14 Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> sig! DEBA6F3E 2000-07-14 Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> sig! DEBA6F3E 2000-07-14 Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> uid [ revoked] Thorvald Natvig <slicer@sourceforge.net> rev! DEBA6F3E 2007-11-15 Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> sig!3 DEBA6F3E 2006-09-28 Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> uid Thorvald Natvig <slicer@users.sourceforge.net> sig! 52B7487E 2009-03-12 Steinar H. Gunderson <sesse@debian.org> sig!3 DEBA6F3E 2007-11-15 Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> sub 4096g/17F99A77 2000-07-14 sig! DEBA6F3E 2000-07-14 Thorvald Natvig <thorvald@natvig.com> 10 signatures not checked due to missing keys Let's test if its a version 4 or greater key Key is OpenPGP version 4 or greater. Good! Check for key expire stuff Valid "e" flag on key 0xF09B1EEDDEBA6F3E, no expiration Valid "s" flag on key 0xF09B1EEDDEBA6F3E, no expiration 2. Background ------------- Applicant writes: I'm Thorvald, 32 years old, living in Norway, and currently finishing my PhD in High Performance Computing. I started out on the C64 when I was 8, moved on the Amiga, then on to the PC when it became obvious that was the faster platform. My first "open source" contribution was a rotational zoom texture routine I put in the public domain at a demoparty. Self-modifying i386 assembly, those were the days. This was also my first clear demonstration that open source can have higher quality than closed source; it was far better than what was used in the entries in the democompetition. I think my first public contribution to a "proper" open source project was patching samba to support quotas on Linux. My first personal open source project was the GPL'ed mp3info in '97, and these days I'm the lead developer of Mumble (http://mumble.sourceforge.net). I often get asked why I chose to license Mumble under the BSD. Back when I started, VoIP possibilities for gaming were rather horrible in voice qualilty and latency. So I wrote Mumble. However, my end goal isn't really to dominate the world with MY software, the end goal is better VoIP for gaming, which is something I love. So it would really please me if other developers and programmers take my code and glue it verbatim into their commercial products. For me, software freedom is the ability to develop and share your code without restrictions on what your recipients can do with it. Freedom is also about respect for people that don't feel the same way I do, and that seems to work both ways; we have GPL link exceptions from the GPL packages we use, and a patent license for the crypt we use. It's amazing what you can achieve when you ask politely. I've been using Linux since 1994 or so; I don't really remember the date, but I do remember copying 3 boxes of floppies to install Slackware, and I remember that the last disc was a bad copy. I later moved on to RedHat, and stuck with that until Ubuntu came along. I gave Ubuntu a shot, and liked it, and it was during a discussion with a friend that I discovered Debian was more than just the overly cautious, conservative "stable" distribution, there was this thing called "testing", and it was even more up-to-date than Ubuntu was. Well maintained bleeding edge software, just the way I like it, and it eventually stabilizes into something usable on production boxes as well? Count me in. Once Mumble was relased, I thought I'd give packaging it as a .deb a shot. At the time, the Debian NM process looked intimidating and slow, so I went with REVU instead -- it let me focus on the technical stuff. The goal was to go through Utnubu once things worked, but before I got that far, someone had already ported my Ubuntu package to Debian. I joined the effort and became part of the pkg-voip team, and the more I've worked with the debian process, the more I've come to like it. I'm currently a DM, so I can upload packages, but I'd like to get more involved, so I'm now trying to become a DD. 3. Philosophy and Procedures ----------------------------- Thorvald has a good understanding of Debian's philosophy and procedures and answered all my questions about the social contract, DFSG, BTS, etc. in a good way. Thorvald committed to uphold the SC and DFSG in his Debian work and accepts the DMUP. 4. Tasks and Skills ------------------- Thorvald has a good understanding of the technical side of Debian. He is the maintainer of mumble (uploads as DM) and the package is in good shape. Thorvald also answered my other questions regarding T&S without problems and provided patches for RC bugs. 5. Recommendation ----------------- I recommend to accept Thorvald as a Debian Developer. Cheers -- Leo "costela" Antunes [insert a witty retort here]
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