Hello Chris, I will investigate what is the best way to do the packaging. Personally, I think a single RPM is better. Cheers, Manuel ----- Original Message ----- From: "Christopher R. Antila" <crantila@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: mospina@xxxxxxxxxx, music@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Tuesday, February 21, 2012 1:09:05 PM Subject: Package and Revise the Musicians' Guide -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Greetings to the list: ==== Packaging ==== The Musicians' Guide has been published since Fedora 14. I think, when Brendan says he wants to "package" it, he wants an RPM version that users can download and access without an active Internet connection. Nobody has done this yet. For most of the Guides, this isn't particularly useful. That's why (I think) only the Release Notes are packaged. Theoretically, everybody should read the Release Notes. For most of the other documentation, it's not as useful to have an RPM package. I'm not even sure whether the Release Notes are packaged any more. The Musicians' Guide is a little different. There are a lot of extra media files that go along with the tutorial exercises, and it would be handy for users to download all the media files at once. I'm not sure of the best way to deliver these files--maybe even separately from the documentation, or separately from each other--but RPM packages would be useful. I would really appreciate somebody else's help in taking care of the packaging issue, so I can spend my time on the list below. ==== Revising ==== These have always been problems, but they're more prominent if an Audio Spin or RPM package draws attention to the documentation. 1.) Official Fedora documentation shouldn't recommend and provide instructions for installing non-Fedora package repositories. There's a chapter about the real-time kernel and the Planet CCRMA repository. This is also an issue because it involves/recommends a lot of manual tweaking that tends to break between releases. I'm fine with just leaving this, but it must be tested. 2.) Related to the previous point, Qtractor and SuperCollider are only available from the RPMFusion and Planet CCRMA repositories, respectively. Depending on what we do about point (1), we could just remove those chapters until the Qtractor and SuperCollider make it into the official repositories. Ideally, only the rt-kernel would live at Planet CCRMA (as far as "things in the Musicians' Guide" go). 3.) I didn't finish some of the tutorials, so they don't have examples of the completed project. I want to rewrite a few of those with new content anyway. The Ardour tutorial is particularly questionable; it doesn't have a completed version *and* I don't know if the setup process even works for other people. 4.) The Qtractor tutorial relies on a copyrighted sound recording that isn't freely available on the Internet. It's also not included. Easy fix: adjust the tutorial to use a recording, even of the same music, that we can redistribute. 5.) Here's the best one! The Audacity tutorial is made with fragments of a copyrighted sound recording that *are* included. My understanding of copyright law at the time suggested it would be okay, because the fragments are short, because it is impossible to reconstruct the original content from the fragments, and because it is intended merely for private, educational purposes (learning how to use Audacity). I have since realized that, even though these factors may apply, it won't necessarily stop an organization from filing a lawsuit. Packaging these fragments makes it worse, and including them on live media for a Spin makes it worse still. This point also has an easy solution: start with fragments that we can redistribute. We wouldn't even have to rewrite the tutorial... just do all of the same things with the new fragments. 6.) There's a "to-do" list in the comments at the bottom of the Revision_History.xml file of the Guide's repository.[0] 7.) There are also a few issues on Bugzilla, including some patches that should be incorporated. 8.) Then of course I complain about my writing quality. Everything needs to be copy-edited. In short, other contributors' help would be greatly appreciated. Let's get crackin'! Christopher. [0] https://fedorahosted.org/musicians-guide/ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPQwrRAAoJEInCktGVqZ8V71EH/RKhFLKMRMkDXUqWlt6EVQhN UdV7qFWMp3tMkztLFt+Si7LcxVtAi2ajlGFEj0tx4YY/ra/SQNvXx1NgB0RLoC49 wSVd9WK9uX/yGKk96/hfjwg+WtxXkDz03+rXJDV6Owry1NdzjAMUlqMCzqbs1unU SpNAOSM25EqUaaCn3T8yDkRoqaiZUcFlznIndx1O4A2CD63Ktav9IL16Z4MIX3uj BHKcprtB9LDqRtIKD8BOaOqYb10AFjdWzKMIA02ND3kumKh/BCCPE9xtVj6mQaNo bueI6dlAjjPJf5sNEnaKBDgmt7R71A94SWXNOw8TsRKO62tYg249SQ8ZrdXU880= =6ubV -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ music mailing list music@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/music