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authorBastien Guerry <bzg@altern.org>2011-07-28 16:15:28 +0200
committerBastien Guerry <bzg@altern.org>2011-07-28 16:15:28 +0200
commite9bb1f7270c928765b67ef2e20147740569e98a0 (patch)
tree9518b5755395581ee8df74d8a8aa933444f33227
parent7340cee33adb8b5f331d5c58517cb5a86f4ce13b (diff)
downloadorg-mode-e9bb1f7270c928765b67ef2e20147740569e98a0.tar.gz
README_maintainer: update the link to "Git from bottom up".
-rw-r--r--README_maintainer2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/README_maintainer b/README_maintainer
index 157fc27..a4a93c7 100644
--- a/README_maintainer
+++ b/README_maintainer
@@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ Emacs uses bzr. A useful introduction to bzr for Emacs developers can
be found [[http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/BzrForEmacsDevs][here]]. While I see all the advantages this would have, I
cannot bring myself to switch away from git for my day-to-day work,
because I know git so well, and because git seems to me as being much
-more powerful, conceptionally simple (once you have [[http://www.newartisans.com/2008/04/git-from-the-bottom-up.html][bent your head
+more powerful, conceptionally simple (once you have [[http://newartisans.com/2008/04/git-from-the-bottom-up/][bent your head
around it]]), and so much faster.
So the way I have been doing things with Emacs is this: