"Alexey Eremenko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> 1) documentation available offline corresponding to the product. (eg
> SUSE Linux 10.2 - and generic Linux - and Generic UNIX - all what is
> relevant)

Relevant docs come with SUSE Linux.  I something essential is missing,
file an enhancement request as already said.

If more is needed, set up a dedicated doc product or doc project with
the help of the openSUSE build service.

> *Of course, the programmer's docs doesn't need to be installed by default.
[...]
> In addition to skill levels ducumentation should be searchable (like
> google) should be devided by topics - and - standards. - like ext3
> specification - or POSIX specs or RPM specs - whatever.

Sounds like devel docs ;)

> 5) I think it is a good idea to include third party docs to SUSE Linux
> - if they are useful for SUSE users of course. Like "Maximum RPM"
> open-sourced book by RedHat or TLDP docs.

Devel doc!  You must set up an Add-on Product on openSUSE.

> SUSE does this already. (few books included, but hard to find - next
> to impossible unless you know the RPM's name)

IIRC, the yast package management knows about RPM catagories (RPM
Groups); just use the view suitable for such a search ;)

> 6) documentation must be fast.
>
> Here SUSE Linux lacks badly - the KDE docs indexing takes a lot of
> time. (minutes or hours) a possible solution is to provide preindexed
> database for most docs.

That's a valid concern.  There should be an option to start the indexing
immediately after the installation - someone to file a feature request?

-- 
Karl Eichwalder
R&D / Documentation                         SUSE Linux Products GmbH

Key fingerprint = B2A3 AF2F CFC8 40B1 67EA  475A 5903 A21B 06EB 882E

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