On Mon, 2007-02-12 at 15:20 -0500, Griff 5watt wrote:
Hi all:
My name is Aaron Bowman.
Hi Aaron, welcome, and thanks for making the trip from Connecticut to
the FUDCon; sounds like it was worth it?
I am located in Connecticut, USA, and work as the technology manager
for a small group of medical practices.
I have been using Linux at home for a number of years, and have
decided that it was time that I find a way to give back to the
community. I originally started with downloaded floppies of Debian
and Slackware, eventually settling on Red Hat 5.0. Around RH7 I began
trying out other distributions again, but returned to Red Hat each
time. In short, I have used every major release of Red Hat and Fedora
since RH 5.0, and just recently moved up to FC6 (yeah, finally got
wireless to work).
I am not a power user, nor am I a programmer. I have done very small
projects in VB and C++ on Win32; I have worked in PHP, HTML, and SQL
in Linux. I have played with Java, Mono (C#), JavaScript, SGML, XML,
COBOL, Perl, and LaTeX. Alas, I have only played, but would like to
do more.
Sounds great, we can definitely use more technologists with the desire
to hack. There really is no limit to the coolness we can cook up. I
see you haven't done Python, yet ... now is probably a good time.
Paul had a good link for an online book, and the URL or details escape
me ...
Earlier this month I had the opportunity to go to FUDCon in Boston;
I
attended Paul's session on Doc Tools. If I understood the discussion
correctly, the goal is for all documentation to be stored in XML, with
a static web interface, an editable wiki interface, and of course CVS
access. Currently the wiki is not stored in XML and it will need to
be converted. I would like to help with the conversion of the
documentation in the wiki to XML.
I guess the best place to start for now is the following:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-docs-list/2006-November/msg00140.html
Right now our efforts on getting Wiki to XML is focused on Python code
written for the Moin Moin Wiki as part of last year's Google Summer of
Code. A recent post on this subject requesting coding and package
maintenance was here:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-infrastructure-list/2007-February/m...
What is best for you to do? It depends on your interest ...
If you are interested in working on the toolchain, I suggest you first
get a good handle on what we are doing. You can see everything
explicitly in the 'docs-common' and 'example-tutorial' modules:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/DocsProject/CvsUsage#Anonymous-CVS
(You can also pursue getting write access to the CVS, in parallel.)
If you are interested in generating content, there are specific guides
that need finishing or updating for Fedora 7. In this case, you would
want to pick one or more amongst new end-user, administrator, or
power-user guides.
(sending now :)
- Karsten
--
Karsten Wade, RHCE, 108 Editor ^ Fedora Documentation Project
Sr. Developer Relations Mgr. |
fedoraproject.org/wiki/DocsProject
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