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Tom Rini

Main Quotes Index

Issue #272, Section #15 (5�Sep�2004:�PPC8xx Maintainership)
Issue #264, Section #12 (25�Jun�2004:�Linux 2.6.6-mm3 Released; Status Of KGDB)
Issue #259, Section #3 (22�May�2004:�Documenting KGDB)
Issue #257, Section #2 (6�Apr�2004:�Status Of kgdb_serial And Run-Time Selection Of KGDB Communication Channels)
Issue #256, Section #1 (2�Apr�2004:�Status Of KGDB Support In 2.6)
Issue #254, Section #1 (19�Mar�2004:�Gathering All KGDB Implementations Together)
Issue #254, Section #25 (19�Mar�2004:�Some Progress On KGDB)
Issue #250, Section #19 (4�Feb�2004:�kgdb 2.0.4 Released)
Issue #246, Section #4 (26�Dec�2003:�New -tiny Kernel Patchset To Collect Patches That Shrink The Kernel)
Issue #233, Section #1 (4�Oct�2003:�Improving CPU Detection)
Issue #228, Section #1 (17�Aug�2003:�Kernel 2.6 Size Increase Troubling For Embedded Developers)
Issue #214, Section #5 (28�Apr�2003:�New Kernel Tree For Embedded Linux)
Issue #209, Section #3 (16�Mar�2003:�Moving Swap Configuration Into The General Setup Menu)
Issue #194, Section #1 (2�Dec�2002:�Linux 2.4.20-rc2 Released)
Issue #182, Section #29 (1�Sep�2002:�Linux 2.4.20-pre5)
Issue #179, Section #2 (11�Aug�2002:�Status Of Serial Port Support In 2.5)
Issue #179, Section #14 (11�Aug�2002:�Status Of Generic RTC Driver For 2.5)
Issue #178, Section #15 (4�Aug�2002:�Generic RTC Driver)
Issue #175, Section #5 (14�Jul�2002:�Status Of O(1) Scheduler In 2.4)
Issue #153, Section #9 (11�Feb�2002:�Linus Gives BitKeeper A Test Run)
Issue #150, Section #5 (14�Jan�2002:�Multiple Kernel Trees)
Issue #149, Section #8 (7�Jan�2002:�Alan Continues 2.2 Maintenance)
Issue #101, Section #5 (8�Jan�2001:�PowerPC Tree Out Of Date)
Issue #101, Section #7 (8�Jan�2001:�Status Of PowerPC Port In The Official Tree)
Issue #90, Section #3 (23�Oct�2000:�VM Looking Good; 'OOM Killer' Discussion)
Issue #87, Section #8 (2�Oct�2000:�Getting Very Close To 2.4.0)

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Kernel Traffic is grateful to be developed on a computer donated by Professor Greg Benson and Professor Allan Cruse in the Department of Computer Science at the University of San Francisco. This is the same department that invented FlashMob Computing. Kernel Traffic is hosted by the generous folks at kernel.org. All pages on this site are copyright their original authors, and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0.