i personally miss docs for: vpn (interaction wih m$), personal video
recording, authentication/integration of linux clients in active
directory, fedora directory server, getting address book from
microsoft exchange, etc. also may be interesting one introduction to
linux using fedora. also introduction to programming (C, gtk, qt,
etc).
does all this look to you like the old linux cookbook using fedora?
what if: instead saving the tips and tricks in our email account or
elsewhere, we put them in one common place on fedoraproject.org?
2006/11/6, Karsten Wade <kwade@xxxxxxxxxx>:
We now have a small handful of regular documents to keep updated for
each release: release notes; Installation Guide; Desktop User Guide. We
also have other documents that get occasional updates, when needed or
prodded.
Looking here:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Docs/Drafts
http://fedora.redhat.com/docs
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Docs
What is missing?
* Do we need to divide into more help for new-to-Fedora users?
* Should we put more energy into focusing on systems administrators who
are new to Fedora and/or Linux?
* How about updating our own Documentation Guide?
* There are other guides such as the Packaging Guide and the Developers
Guide that could use updating or editing; do we want to adopt these and
begin a highly technical interaction with Fedora developers?
We have a nice influx of new writers, and I'm curious where we all think
we should go next. Let's discuss. :)
- Karsten
--
Karsten Wade, RHCE, 108 Editor ^ Fedora Documentation Project
Sr. Developer Relations Mgr. | fedoraproject.org/wiki/DocsProject
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