Tiffany is working on re-doing some of the live.gnome.org pages. So maybe it could be something the two of you could work on. She has an area where the new stuff is and maybe we can figure out how to best integrate it.
Again, thank you for your work on this, it's quite inspiring. sri On Thu, Aug 29, 2013 at 5:42 PM, Sindhu S <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, Sri and the list! > > I happy to tell you that I have written another guide titled "Before you > approach your mentor - Documentation" available here: > > http://sindhus.bitbucket.org/before-you-approach-your-mentor-documentation.html > > I have written about the inspiration for both guides here: > http://sindhus.bitbucket.org/announcing-newcomer-end-to-end-guides.html > > The source for both these guides is here: > https://github.com/sindhus/guide-to-gnome-contribution > > On Thu, Aug 29, 2013 at 1:56 AM, Sriram Ramkrishna <[email protected]>wrote: > >> How do you plan on formally integrating something like thsi into our web >> infrastructure? >> > > I am not sure, could you give me ideas on how we can get started? > > The documents definitely need polishing and discussion as something that > goes on GNOME infrastructure may be understood to be the official stance. > > The guides prescribe a specific Gnu/Linux distribution for the sake of > explanation, this may not look OK on the GNOME infrastructure. > > Also I have been asked if this is different from the GNOME wiki pages > about topics touched in the document, to which I say: Yes, the existing > GNOME wiki pages are isolated tutorials. > > My guide talks about the marriage and blurry lines between bugzilla, > terminal, git, patch iterations process and other resources such as mailing > lists and IRC - basically the big picture. I believe it's important for > newcomers to know the *Why* part of learning the tools required to > contribute. > > Thank you! > > -Sindhu >
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