We now believe the site to be fully ready for all openSUSE community
members to contribute to, so without further ado we proudly announce
http://openSUSE-Community.org
Many are still in the dark about the existence and purpose of the new
openSUSE Community website, so here’s a little light. Many productive
things came out of the first community meeting on IRC
(http://en.opensuse.org/Meetings/Community_Meeting_2006-12-16/minutes).
In the brainstorming section, one of these things was the decision to
have a completely new resource for openSUSE users created content, a
place where we can document the stuff that we perhaps can’t put directly
onto openSUSE.org, such as Packman and guru, tutorials, restricted
format issues, etc.
There are many such sites, so we first assessed whether any of them was
suitable. Currently there are many such resources around, but
instructions for each particular thing are scattered over very many
sites. This is confusing to a new user trying to find his way,
counterproductive, and evidently creates quite a bit of duplication of
effort. This is an issue related to the many micro-communities that
openSUSE has, and we believe that in working on this issue, we can truly
be more productive, while making documentation resources more accessible
to new users. So we have decided to create a place where:
(i) we won’t try to replace the great documentation on openSUSE.org, and
reference wherever possible,
(ii) integrate nicely with openSUSE.org (hence using mediawiki and have
a similar looking style), and
(iii) be organized and straightforward; and specifically, organized for
different openSUSE versions.
We invite all openSUSE users to contribute and use the pages on the
website there, and hope that with the help of the entire community we
can make it a truly valuable and unified resource, along with
openSUSE.org.
On behalf of many openSUSE Community members,
Francis Giannaros
Because of increasing community interest in the style guidelines of SUSE
documentation and program texts, these style guides are now released as an
openSUSE project hosted by Novell Forge. These guides should apply to both
internal and external openSUSE projects, so your participation can influence
the future of texts in YaST and the official manuals, among other things. The
guides are licensed under the GFDL to allow other projects to take advantage
them.
The project pages at http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Opensuse-style
give more information about the project and provide HTML and PDF copies of the
current guides. The appearance of the guides themselves is still a work in
progress. There are some minor bugs in the build mechanics and fixes are
needed to make the layout more friendly to the reader.
Feedback about the project and the guides is welcome on
opensuse-doc(a)opensuse.org. That mailing list will also host discussion of any
future style concerns.
Sincerely,
Rebecca Walter
The last piece of the openSUSE 10.2 distribution got released today.
The Live DVD image has a size of 1.7 GB and can be used on every x86
compatible system with at least 512 MB of memory.
It contains a base desktop system (KDE and Gnome) with applications
for office, multimedia and internet usage.
You can downloaded it via
http://download.opensuse.org/distribution/10.2/iso/dvd/openSUSE-10.2-GM-Liv…
have a nice weekend
adrian
--
Adrian Schroeter
SUSE Linux Products GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, 90409 Nuernberg, Germany
email: adrian(a)suse.de
Hi
We have two new mailinglists
<opensuse-networking(a)opensuse.org>
<opensuse-usability(a)opensuse.org>
Both lists are a result of opening up our communication, they replace the
internal lists we had so far. Beside the two new lists we also moved the
internal packager list to the opensuse-packaging list.
To subscribe to the lists, just send an email like this:
opensuse-usability+subscribe(a)opensuse.org
opensuse-networking+subscribe(a)opensuse.org
For more information about the Mailinglists, please look at
http://en.opensuse.org/Mailing_Listshttp://en.opensuse.org/Communicate#Mailing_Lists
--
with kind regards,
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Martin Lasarsch, Core Services
SUSE LINUX GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5 90409 Nuremberg
martin.lasarsch(a)suse.de
----------------------------------------------------------------------
simply change to www.suse.de
From today on the openSUSE Build Service (OBS) is available under
the GPL license for everybody.
You can find the latest version of the source code in the openSUSE
project at Novell Forge:
http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?opensuse
Everybody is invited to join the public development there.
Additionally you can find experimental rpm packages at
http://software.opensuse.org/download/openSUSE:/Tools/
which can be used to easily install and configure an OBS running
on a single host.
Be welcome to join the discussion of the future of OBS in our mailinglist
at opensuse-buildservice(a)opensuse.org or at the irc channel
#opensuse-buildservice on irc.opensuse.org (Freenode).
Further details can be found at
http://en.opensuse.org/Build_Service
--
Adrian Schroeter
SUSE Linux Products GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, 90409 Nuernberg, Germany
email: adrian(a)suse.de
Hi
The next openSUSE status meeting will take place at the official
#opensuse-project IRC channel on freenode
(irc://irc.freenode.net/openSUSE-project)
this Wednesday at
2007/01/24 18:00 CET (17:00 GMT)
This meeting is meant to discuss the latest developments in and around
openSUSE. Please add your topics to the meeting wiki page at:
http://en.opensuse.org/Meetings/Status_Meeting_2007-01-24
as soon as possible. Also, if you cannot attend the meeting, but have
questions you want to see discussed, please add them to the meeting wiki
page as well.
For general info about our IRC meetings read:
http://en.opensuse.org/Meetings/About
For a general technical introduction to IRC (Internet Relay Chat)
see http://www.irchelp.org/ (not affiliated with openSUSE) or enter "IRC
help" into your preferred search engine.
The network we use is freenode - for more information on this, including
how to find a server, visit http://freenode.net/ (not affiliated with
openSUSE either).
--
with kind regards,
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Martin Lasarsch, Core Services
SUSE LINUX GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5 90409 Nuremberg
martin.lasarsch(a)suse.de
----------------------------------------------------------------------
simply change to www.suse.de
Hi
The next openSUSE status meeting will take place at the official
#opensuse-project IRC channel on freenode
(irc://irc.freenode.net/openSUSE-project)
this Wednesday at
2007/01/10 18:00 CET (17:00 GMT)
This meeting is meant to discuss the latest developments in and around
openSUSE. Please add your topics to the meeting wiki page at:
http://en.opensuse.org/Meetings/Status_Meeting_2007-01-10
as soon as possible. Also, if you cannot attend the meeting, but have
questions you want to see discussed, please add them to the meeting wiki
page as well.
For general info about our IRC meetings read:
http://en.opensuse.org/Meetings/About
For a general technical introduction to IRC (Internet Relay Chat)
see http://www.irchelp.org/ (not affiliated with openSUSE) or enter "IRC
help" into your preferred search engine.
The network we use is freenode - for more information on this, including
how to find a server, visit http://freenode.net/ (not affiliated with
openSUSE either).
--
with kind regards,
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Martin Lasarsch, Core Services
SUSE LINUX GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5 90409 Nuremberg
martin.lasarsch(a)suse.de
----------------------------------------------------------------------
simply change to www.suse.de