Hi, > > Also, I'm not sure that LPM will be okay with using material under > > CC-BY-SA, for example (which is Free). If I had to guess, I'd say they > > would want something with the Non Commercial restriction (and a specific > > exclusion for them). > > Yeah, this is something we Don't Know Yet. I believe the LPM folks will > be coming back with a revised proposal at the beginning of next week and > hopefully that will answer some of the questions that we have about how > this would work. Excellent :-) > > But lets keep in mind that as far as I know, it is not clear where the > > content for this magazine will come from. Mel, maybe you can shed some > > light here? > > Keeping in mind that this is still very much a proposal, and we're still > trying to figure out if it would even work and whether we should do it... We certainly should do it - anything which promotes us in such a way is good. I do though think the scope of the publication needs altering. While it is good that the proposal is to try and bring Windows users over from the dark side, we should be looking at those in power at companies, we should be looking at the education markets (hell, the OLPC is probably one of the finest examples of both green technology and how OSS is being used to teach and help in the developing countries). Maybe for a second edition eh ;-) > The magazine content (in terms of both writing and graphics) would come > from a combination of LPM's staff and Fedora community members; > obviously we're hoping to weight that balance towards the Fedora > community as much as possible, but it would depend on how many people > stepped up to participate. Another open question is the process of > determining what that content will be. (So in short, Spot's right; it's > not clear.) That's down to the editorial staff. The process I used to take was this 1. Get all the articles together. By submitting the article, it meant that they agreed with the terms of publication. 2. Proof read and send back to author with helpful suggestions (some did include lines such as "in it's current state, it would not be suitable for publication") 3. If there was enough to publish, the weaker articles would be quietly dropped or edited them down - effectively making them space fillers 4. If an article was close to the knuckle (legally), it would have to be checked by the legal people. This usually meant that it would be delayed until the next issue 5. Final edit and send to the production editor 6. Production editor makes the mock up and emails it to the team who then proof it again to ensure accuracy and content validity. Now, for us if it's not supplied by LPM, the editor (or another member of the editorial staff) will need to check that if it's a walk through that the walk through is correct. If it is supplied by LPM, then I'd assume it's correct, but still check (IIRC, Linux Format in the UK did a series using the GIMP and while it was fantastic, there was one that never worked irrespective of the version of GIMP used. I never did find out why as my subscription lapsed [lost job, subscription went to save money, old story...]) TTFN PFJ (getting excited!) -- Sie können mich aufreizen und wirklich heiß machen!
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