<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metapackage xmlns:os="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install" xmlns="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install">
  <group distversion="openSUSE 11.1">
    <name>bitlbee</name>
    <summary>Installs bitlbee</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of bitlbee:
    We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 11.1</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/11.1</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>bitlbee</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>bitlbee-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="openSUSE 11.0">
    <name>bitlbee</name>
    <summary>Installs bitlbee</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of bitlbee:
    We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 11.0</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/11.0</url>
      </repository>
      <repository recommended="false">
        <name>openSUSE:11.0</name>
        <summary>openSUSE 11.0 distribution</summary>
        <description>The openSUSE 11.0 distribution.</description>
        <url>http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/11.0/standard/</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>bitlbee</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>bitlbee-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="openSUSE 10.3">
    <name>bitlbee</name>
    <summary>Installs bitlbee</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of bitlbee:
    We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 10.3</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/10.3</url>
      </repository>
      <repository recommended="false">
        <name>openSUSE:10.3</name>
        <summary>openSUSE 10.3 distribution</summary>
        <description>The openSUSE 10.3 distribution.</description>
        <url>http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/10.3/standard/</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>bitlbee</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>bitlbee-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="openSUSE 10.2">
    <name>bitlbee</name>
    <summary>Installs bitlbee</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of bitlbee:
    We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 10.2</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/10.2</url>
      </repository>
      <repository recommended="false">
        <name>openSUSE:10.2</name>
        <summary>openSUSE 10.2 distribution</summary>
        <description>The openSUSE 10.2 distribution.</description>
        <url>http://download.opensuse.org/distribution/10.2/repo/oss/</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>bitlbee</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>bitlbee-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>bitlbee &gt; bitlbee-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>We are both console lovers. But it is annoying to have a few tty&apos;s open with
chat things in them. IRC, ICQ, MSN, Jabber... For X there is Gaim, which
supports many chatprotocols. Why wasn&apos;t there such a thing for the console?

The idea to port Gaim was easily thought of, of course. But we liked our IRC
clients. And we used it the most, so we used it best. Importing it into the
IRC client was a nice idea. But what if someone liked a different client. Then
(s)he had to duplicate our work.

That&apos;s a shame, we thought. Doing work twice is pointless. So when Wilmer got
the ingenious thought in his mind while farming, to create an IRC to other
chatnetworks gateway, we were both so excited, that we started working on it
almost immediately. And the result is BitlBee.

This package comes with support for MSN, Jabber, Oscar and Yahoo, as well as
enabled flood protection.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
</metapackage>