[opensuse-doc] LfL: HTML Version Available
Hi, as the subject says: There is now a HTML version of Lessons for Lizards available: http://forgeftp.novell.com/lfl/.html/ I don't consider the contents nor the layout as finished. See the Jobs description page how *you* can contribute: http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Lfl/Jobs Have fun and happy new year, :-) Tom -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH >o) Documentation Team Maxfeldstrasse 5 /\\ Technical Editor 90409 Nuernberg, Germany _\_v http://en.opensuse.org/Documentation_Team --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
Thomas Schraitle wrote:
Hi,
as the subject says: There is now a HTML version of Lessons for Lizards available:
http://forgeftp.novell.com/lfl/.html/
I don't consider the contents nor the layout as finished. See the Jobs description page how *you* can contribute:
http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Lfl/Jobs
Have fun and happy new year, :-) Tom
I didn't follow LfL very close by lack of time, but find the thing quite interesting. I wonder how one can participate occasionally (that is not in any job listed :-), for example giving some clues or some debugging. For example, I just tried the "usb boot device" page and found some (little) lacks and tried it fully to see one of my mother board don't boot, when an other do. so we need some way to exchange from editors to readers and vice-versa. We already discussed this for a very long time on the LDP mailing list, so I know the question is hard to fix. In our system I would propose the following solution: * open a (media) wiki - or a special namespace on opensuse one. * write a page on the wiki for any LfL subject. Make this page read only (writing only for the author). So writing the page should be quite simple (writing a docbook backend to mediawiki, or simply slightly modifying the html display). * open only to the writing the discussion page. Advertise the "+" use for better reading (eventually edit the style sheet) as so, the author of the page could edit -or don't at his will- the page. The readers could add some comments, usefull but may be not worth writing to a paper book. as an example, like previously said, the author of the usb boot page could add a "cd sylinux... before cp msb.bin..., think it better _not_ to use a valid /dev/sdX name, just in case the user makes a copy paste including the final <RC> of the line (easy to do :-(). But saying that this don't works with the ASUS A7N8X mobo may not be worth writing in the core of the article, but worth to be said on the wiki... jdd -- http://www.dodin.net http://dodin.org/mediawiki/index.php/GPS_Lowrance_GO --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
On Friday 29 December 2006 18:28, jdd wrote:
Thomas Schraitle wrote:
Hi,
as the subject says: There is now a HTML version of Lessons for Lizards available:
http://forgeftp.novell.com/lfl/.html/
I don't consider the contents nor the layout as finished. See the Jobs description page how *you* can contribute:
http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Lfl/Jobs
Have fun and happy new year, :-) Tom
I didn't follow LfL very close by lack of time, but find the thing quite interesting.
I wonder how one can participate occasionally (that is not in any job listed :-), for example giving some clues or some debugging.
I didn't get around to adding the tester job. But it is very needed. There are two easy ways you can do this: 1) E-mail the author. If I remember correctly, the USB one is Tom's so you can e-mail toms@suse.de 2) Probably the better choice. Add comments in the file. Send e-mail to get signed up for the project. Check out the file. Add comments in remark tags. Start the comment with your openSUSE username so the author knows who it is from. Stick them in the beginning or end of a para so it doesn't cause extra line breaks (although toms might have eliminated this issue). Write whatever you want to say to the author. Check in the changed file with a commit message something like "added remarks from testing". We use the second method (remarks) a lot internally in our review process when developing files and it works really well. We can give each other feedback and note when a certain bit of info is still in a NEEDINFO state when waiting for developer feedback. More details about our remark "codes" are in the style guide. It is possible to build a version of the book with visible remarks. So they can be visible in a review or editing state but not visible for a final product. It is a pretty nifty tool. If you use the <!-- --> style comments, they can't be made visible. We mostly only use those for layout-related changes anymore. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
Rebecca Walter wrote:
I didn't get around to adding the tester job. But it is very needed. There are two easy ways you can do this:
1) E-mail the author. If I remember correctly, the USB one is Tom's so you can e-mail toms@suse.de
my subject, here is casual user, as most reader will be. There is a need of some sort of comment writing without having to subscribe (no more than on the openSUSE wiki). usually there are two kind of concern for the user: "is this problem already known?", "can I drop the comment in a matter of minutes", and the fear of disturbing the author unusefully. I know (as a LDP author) that books are not reviewed very often and a mail can be lost on the way :-( I don't know how wikibooks handle the thing: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page jdd -- http://www.dodin.net http://dodin.org/mediawiki/index.php/GPS_Lowrance_GO --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
Hi jdd, On Saturday 30 December 2006 12:44, jdd wrote:
Rebecca Walter wrote:
I didn't get around to adding the tester job. But it is very needed. There are two easy ways you can do this:
1) E-mail the author. If I remember correctly, the USB one is Tom's so you can e-mail toms@suse.de
my subject, here is casual user, as most reader will be. There is a need of some sort of comment writing without having to subscribe (no more than on the openSUSE wiki).
That's a good question. Would it help to create a Wiki page to write quick comments, suggestions, wishes, etc.? This can then be edited from time to time to remove old entries.
usually there are two kind of concern for the user: "is this problem already known?",
You can write and ask on this mailinglist. :)
"can I drop the comment in a matter of minutes", and the fear of disturbing the author unusefully.
Again, you can always ask on this mailinglist or ask the author(s) directly. From my experience authors would *love* to get mails that at least someone has read their text. :)
I know (as a LDP author) that books are not reviewed very often and a mail can be lost on the way :-(
Right, but you can always write to opensuse-doc. The mails are archived, nothing is lost. :)
I don't know how wikibooks handle the thing:
From my perspective, the problems are still the same, be it with Wiki or with DocBook XML. If you want to write good texts (who don't want this?) your text will have to go through several steps: Writing, proofreading, testing, commenting, translating etc. needs time and energy. I don't want to go into the details of comparing Wiki with DocBook but the tasks are roughly the same. Tom -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH >o) Documentation Team Maxfeldstrasse 5 /\\ Technical Editor 90409 Nuernberg, Germany _\_v http://en.opensuse.org/Documentation_Team --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
Thomas Schraitle wrote:
Right, but you can always write to opensuse-doc. The mails are archived, nothing is lost. :)
true. This very list could be used as an archive. This would need a consistent numbering (may be this is not exactly the good word: I mean each paragraph with it own unique number, for reference)
I don't know how wikibooks handle the thing:
From my perspective, the problems are still the same, be it with Wiki or with DocBook XML.
again, not about writing the core text, but about interaction with the reader. for example, sometime ago, there where an article about depth of field (photography). The discussion page of that article was filled with complains from the initial author not liking the edits from other users. right these days there was a discussion on the same topic on the ldp discussion list: what about the authorship of a HOWTO writtent down on a wiki. the problem is similar, there are no really satisfactory solution. using this very mailing-list and eventually a wiki page is pretty good :-) happy new year, it's very late to work :-)) jdd -- http://www.dodin.net http://dodin.org/mediawiki/index.php/GPS_Lowrance_GO --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
Hi, On Saturday 30 December 2006 19:42, jdd wrote:
[...]
I don't know how wikibooks handle the thing:
From my perspective, the problems are still the same, be it with Wiki or with DocBook XML.
again, not about writing the core text, but about interaction with the reader.
Ok, jdd, what do you think about this page: http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Lfl/Feedback With this page everybody can leave comments, wishes or general feedback. It's even linked from the main page. :)
[...Similar LDP problems...] the problem is similar, there are no really satisfactory solution.
Right. Of course, we all would like to see people contributing with text, corrections, etc. in DocBook-XML but I fear that's a bit unrealistic for simple typos. It's seems that we don't solve the problem this year. If nobody has a good solution I fear we will have to live with that, at least for the moment.
using this very mailing-list and eventually a wiki page is pretty good :-)
Yes, see the above page.
happy new year, it's very late to work :-)) jdd
Yes, very true. Happy new year! :-)) Bye, Tom -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH >o) Documentation Team Maxfeldstrasse 5 /\\ Technical Editor 90409 Nuernberg, Germany _\_v http://en.opensuse.org/Documentation_Team --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
Thomas Schraitle wrote:
Ok, jdd, what do you think about this page:
http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Lfl/Feedback
With this page everybody can leave comments, wishes or general feedback. It's even linked from the main page. :)
it's a very good starting point as it's easy to forget it (if no success) or extend it (if success) just a comment: is there a reason not to make it on the openSUSE wiki? thanks jdd -- http://www.dodin.net http://dodin.org/mediawiki/index.php/GPS_Lowrance_GO --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
Hi, On Sunday 31 December 2006 10:30, jdd wrote:
Thomas Schraitle wrote:
Ok, jdd, what do you think about this page:
http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Lfl/Feedback
With this page everybody can leave comments, wishes or general feedback. It's even linked from the main page. :)
it's a very good starting point as it's easy to forget it (if no success) or extend it (if success)
:-)
just a comment: is there a reason not to make it on the openSUSE wiki?
As far as I remember it seems to us more "natural" to create it there. Novellforge has all these nice little Custom Tags[1] that you can place on your Wiki page. The "Activity" section on the main page is one example. I don't think this is possible on openSUSE Wiki. Tom ------- [1] http://developer.novell.com/wiki/index.php/Help:Custom_Tags -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH >o) Documentation Team Maxfeldstrasse 5 /\\ Technical Editor 90409 Nuernberg, Germany _\_v http://en.opensuse.org/Documentation_Team --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
it's a very good starting point as it's easy to forget it (if no success) or extend it (if success)
just a comment: is there a reason not to make it on the openSUSE wiki?
The project is on Forge so we have SVN, etc. It is easiest for everyone if everything is in the same place. The login you need to use is the same--you don't have to create a new account. Just login with your opensuse username and password. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-doc+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-doc+help@opensuse.org
participants (3)
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jdd
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Rebecca Walter
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Thomas Schraitle