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X Strike Force XFree86 SVN commit: r1563 - in trunk/debian: . local



Author: branden
Date: 2004-06-23 16:36:06 -0500 (Wed, 23 Jun 2004)
New Revision: 1563

Modified:
   trunk/debian/CHANGESETS
   trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml
Log:
(cosmetic) Fix missing quotation mark.  Thanks to Steinar H. Gunderson for
the catch.


Modified: trunk/debian/CHANGESETS
===================================================================
--- trunk/debian/CHANGESETS	2004-06-23 21:30:19 UTC (rev 1562)
+++ trunk/debian/CHANGESETS	2004-06-23 21:36:06 UTC (rev 1563)
@@ -53,6 +53,6 @@
 Add FAQ entries:
 + What is the story with XFree86 being forked?
 + What is the story with XFree86's license?
-    1562
+    1562, 1563
 
 vim:set ai et sts=4 sw=4 tw=80:

Modified: trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml
===================================================================
--- trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml	2004-06-23 21:30:19 UTC (rev 1562)
+++ trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml	2004-06-23 21:36:06 UTC (rev 1563)
@@ -329,16 +329,16 @@
 Version 11 (X11), however, in 1987.</p>
 
 <p>In 1988, a non-profit group called the MIT X Consortium (later just "X
-Consortium) was formed to direct future development of X standards in an
+Consortium") was formed to direct future development of X standards in an
 atmosphere intended to be inclusive of many commercial and educational
-interests.  The freely-licensed SI permitted anyone to
-produce proprietary derivatives, and many of the X Consortium members poured
-resources into competing with each other in part on the basis of their
-proprietary extensions to the SI.  The X Window System thus became one of the
-many fronts in the so-called "<a
-href="http://www.faqs.org/docs/artu/ch02s01.html";>Unix Wars</a>".  Nevertheless,
-some cooperation was achieved, and the X Consortium produced several incremental
-but significant revisions to X11, concluding with Release 6 in 1994 (X11R6).</p>
+interests.  The freely-licensed SI permitted anyone to produce proprietary
+derivatives, and many of the X Consortium members poured resources into
+competing with each other in part on the basis of their proprietary extensions
+to the SI.  The X Window System thus became one of the many fronts in the
+so-called "<a href="http://www.faqs.org/docs/artu/ch02s01.html";>Unix Wars</a>".
+Nevertheless, some cooperation was achieved, and the X Consortium produced
+several incremental but significant revisions to X11, concluding with Release 6
+in 1994 (X11R6).</p>
 
 <p>The X Consortium dissolved at the end of 1996, producing a final, small
 revision to X11R6 called X11R6.3.  Ownership of X then passed to the <a



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