Nice wiki with visual screenshots and diagrams is the best option On Thursday, October 24, 2013, Javier Lopez wrote:
> I agree with the fact that we should excel at our documentation, I'm not > particular fondly about videos (since they may be hard to update), however > a > nice wiki with plenty of diagrams + screenshots would be wonderful. We > already > have channels to ask questions at any time, and the ml is open 24/7. > > In my opinion, however, we could organize some documentation hacktons at > the > very beginning of the cycle to verify that our documentation (still) rocks. > > Since many of us have been involved on the team for a while, we could not > see > obvious issues with the documentation, therefore I think it could be a > good idea > to run some public polls asking for feedback (in parallel?), and organize > some > Q&A sessions, focusing in the aspects we could find in the polls. I'm > afraid > that if we just stop creating public sessions we could been seen as a kind > of > closed group, let's keep running the extra mile, let's add the extra > cream, we > as Ubuntu tend to add. > > In my opinion repeating information is not an issue, if we're also creating > bridges for new members, I still remember when I attended my first Ubuntu > meeting and I was very excited because of been able to interact directly > with my > Ubuntu heroes. > > > On 23/10/13 at 08:26pm, Elfy wrote: > > On 23/10/13 20:10, Nicholas Skaggs wrote: > > >I agree Jackson it can be hard for folks to attend a seemingly > > >random time for the sessions. > > > > > >Any thoughts on producing these and then allowing folks to get the > > >information anytime? Should we make wiki tutorials? Video > > >tutorials? Have open question days after releasing the tutorial? > > > > > >Nicholas > > > > > > > > > > > Just a quick comment on video's - wonderful things if you've got a > > good internet connection ... > > > > /Basically at the beginning of each cycle now for several cycles, we > > as a team take time to host a series of classroom sessions, or > > workshops to instruct people on specific topics./ > > > > Given that - why? > > > > Why repeat the same information again and again. > > > > If we did wiki pages for each topic then would we need to do it > > again? I'd think not. > > > > Now - people want to ask questions - ok, why not have an irc channel > > for it - like ubuntu-quality-questions for instance - people idle in > > the normal channel so it's not too hard to idle in another. > > > > Only refer to the new channel on the wiki's so it's only going to be > > found by people actually reading those wiki pages. > > > > Elfy > > > > -- > > Ubuntu Forum Council Member > > Xubuntu QA Lead > > > > > -- > > Ubuntu-quality mailing list > > [email protected] <javascript:;> > > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-quality > > > -- > Ubuntu-quality mailing list > [email protected] <javascript:;> > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-quality > -- With Regards, *Shubham Rao*
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