*http://docs.jquery.com/

On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 9:45 AM, Jake McGraw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> @jquery doc.jquery.com is down :-P
>
>  - jake
>
>
>
>  On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 9:27 AM, Rey Bango <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  >
>  >  Jason described it perfectly and you won't be left out of the loop because
>  > you don't use Twitter. The mailing list is still the main point of
>  > communication for the jQuery project. You would be surprised, though, how
>  > many people do not subscribe to the mailing list but are on Twitter and
>  > other services. We need to reach those folks as well.
>  >
>  >  Going forward, we're going to use every means possible to get the word out
>  > about jQuery. Remember that part of the team is dedicated to evangelism
>  > efforts so we won't be thinning ourselves out.
>  >
>  >  Rey...
>  >
>  >
>  >
>  >  Rick Faircloth wrote:
>  >
>  > > Thanks, Jason... just wanted to make sure I wasn't getting "left out
>  > > of the loop" or had to subscribe to yet *another* source of info...
>  > >
>  > > Rick
>  > >
>  > >
>  > > > -----Original Message-----
>  > > > From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
>  > Behalf Of Jason Huck
>  > > > Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 8:31 AM
>  > > > To: jQuery (English)
>  > > > Subject: [jQuery] Re: [ANNOUNCE] New Twitter Account for jQuery & 
> jQuery
>  > UI Projects
>  > > >
>  > > >
>  > > > Twitter posts (or "tweets") are limited to 140 characters, so they're
>  > > > not going to replace full-fledged announcements. Rather, most of the
>  > > > time, they'll just be headlines with a URL which points to...you
>  > > > guessed it...the plugin repository, the main site, this list, various
>  > > > blogs, etc.
>  > > >
>  > > > So, I wouldn't worry about news being distributed exclusively via
>  > > > Twitter. You just might find out about something a little bit sooner
>  > > > if you use the service. In fact, even if you don't have a Twitter
>  > > > account, you can still subscribe to an RSS or Atom feed of the updates
>  > > > via your favorite feed reader.
>  > > >
>  > > > I don't know how much automation is currently in place or planned, but
>  > > > it might be nice to set it up to auto-announce new additions to the
>  > > > plugin repository, new posts at planet.jquery.com, etc.
>  > > >
>  > > > - jason
>  > > >
>  > > >
>  > > >
>  > > >
>  > > >
>  > > > On Apr 30, 8:05 am, "Rick Faircloth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  > > >
>  > > > > Hi, Rey...
>  > > > >
>  > > > > First, a disclaimer... I'm not a Twitter user, so I don't "get it", 
> as
>  > I've
>  > > > > heard Twitter users say of no-users.  :o)
>  > > > >
>  > > > > That being said, I wanted to ask why another source of info, beyond
>  > the
>  > > > > jquery.com site, the ton of individual plug-in sites, doc sites, etc,
>  > is needed.
>  > > > >
>  > > > > It seems that we're spreading the sources of info even thinner, 
> rather
>  > than deeper.
>  > > > >
>  > > > > I was surprised to see the Twitter accounts starting up.
>  > > > >
>  > > > > So, I'm hoping to understand the desired benefits of using Twitter.  
> I
>  > know you stated
>  > > > > below that you hope to "maximize the reach of announcements about
>  > upcoming jQuery &
>  > > > > jQuery UI updates and releases."  How does Twitter do that better 
> than
>  > the mailing list?
>  > > > > And will the mailing list continue to be adequate for this of us who
>  > don't "Twitter"?
>  > > > >
>  > > > > Can you clue me in?
>  > > > >
>  > > > > Rick
>  > > > >
>  > > > >
>  > > >
>  > >
>  > >
>  > >
>  > >
>  >
>

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