A hearty welcome to David Schmitt who joined the NGenerics Team. David’s bio : David is a Debian Admin and .Net Developer living and working in Vienna, Austria. He’s partner in a small tech company startup at http://dasz.at/ . His current interests with NGenerics is the implementation of the Immutable namespace. As stated in his bio, …
The home of NGenerics has moved to Google Code from it’s original project site on CodePlex . We’re still in the process of migrating some of the content like the downloads, but we’re mostly up and running. If you have any issues or feature suggestions, please submit them to the Google Code project site .
Content migration for NGenerics went well - but please note the following changes:
All downloads for releases moved to the new project site . Due to Google not being willing to add the MS-PL license to Google Code , we’ve had to re-license NGenerics under the LGPL . LGPL is practically the same license but more wordy. A User Voice site is …
I share the same sentiment as Ayende on the visibility of open source project usage - page views and downloads are not useful in determining usage. If you do use NGenerics in your projects (whether it be public or private), you can let us know on the Ohloh project page . If you’re using it in an public/open source project, drop us a line so …
NGenerics 1.3 has finally reached production status - you can download it here .
With it released, we can start working on some exciting new features for 1.4. Watch this space!
Photo by Lewis Ngugi on Unsplash