The Caml Humps are just a list of links. There seems to be no real archive of contributed OCaml code. Because of this the community is losing these contributions as linked web pages disappear (either because of web-site reorganization, or because the people maintaining those personal web sites have moved on to something else). One example is Benoît de Boursetty's PNM library, which doesn't seem to be at http://www.stud.enst.fr/~debourse/projects.html any longer, as the Humps maintain. This seems like a valuable library, of practical use to me right now. I could try to track down Benoît de Boursetty, or ask about this particular library on this list, but that is not an effective long-term solution for every missing package case. There are also all sorts of other libraries and applications which are far too advanced for me to make use of right now, but which I could see myself using a year or two down the road. But with the web in flux the way it is, it is not wise to rely on any particular web page still being there after any length of time. I could go through and manually download every individual piece of software, but apart from being extraordinarily tedious, I would loose all of the Hump's wonderful organization and descriptions. I think what would be great if all of these packages were available in a centralized, mirrored repository available for download. That way, ideally, people would be able to get every available package and burn it to CDROM, distributing the entire archive for posterity. I know there has been talk of a CPAN-like service, and think that would be great as well. However, nothing so complex is needed for a simple centralized archive. And it is an archive that is needed more. Otherwise the community loses code. I wish I had a server and bandwidth to donate, or I would just do this myself. As it is I'm making an appeal to the community for solutions. If there are no individuals or corporate entities in the OCaml community who are willing/able to provide the required resources, perhaps we could look at something like ibiblio http://ibiblio.org/ Does anyone have any experience with this service? --Sergey __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Platinum - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, live on your desktop! http://platinum.yahoo.com ------------------- To unsubscribe, mail caml-list-request@inria.fr Archives: http://caml.inria.fr Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs FAQ: http://caml.inria.fr/FAQ/ Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners