On 25 December 2012 21:19:50 M. Edward Borasky wrote:
Is there a master list of documentation?
I sort of missed the deadline for anything official, so for Fedora 18 we're going to have to go with the usual "Fedora Audio"-style menagerie.
Over the next week, I hope to start collecting all of our discussions through the spin development process, so that we'll be able to write:
1.) A chronicle of the efforts it tooks us to actually make a spin.
2.) Official documentation to add to the Musicians' Guide, about the software in the spin, the differences between it and a default Live Fedora installation, and maybe a brief history.
3.) Unofficial documentation for the wiki, about additional things you can do, that we can't write in the official docs... like "here's how to install the realtime kernel" and "here's how to install MP3 support for Audacity" and other things.
I expect that much of this already exists, and I'll just have to start collecting things.
I'm itching to go into full-on blogging / tweeting mode on this.
Why not start right away, with a blog post that describes your involvement in the spin's development? In fact, if several of us did this, we'd have a really interesting "chronicle of the efforts it took us to actually make a spin."
Christopher
Great work guys, for the first time after installing your ISO, i could run jackctl and jackd as a normal user, just by adding the groups and the limits.conf thinkies. Qsynth is making nice instruments sounds, and the midi-keyboard functions perfectly. You made my chrismass, Hugo Bokman
On 12/26/2012 06:16 PM, Christopher Antila wrote:
On 25 December 2012 21:19:50 M. Edward Borasky wrote:
Is there a master list of documentation?
I sort of missed the deadline for anything official, so for Fedora 18 we're going to have to go with the usual "Fedora Audio"-style menagerie.
Over the next week, I hope to start collecting all of our discussions through the spin development process, so that we'll be able to write:
1.) A chronicle of the efforts it tooks us to actually make a spin.
2.) Official documentation to add to the Musicians' Guide, about the software in the spin, the differences between it and a default Live Fedora installation, and maybe a brief history.
3.) Unofficial documentation for the wiki, about additional things you can do, that we can't write in the official docs... like "here's how to install the realtime kernel" and "here's how to install MP3 support for Audacity" and other things.
I expect that much of this already exists, and I'll just have to start collecting things.
I'm itching to go into full-on blogging / tweeting mode on this.
Why not start right away, with a blog post that describes your involvement in the spin's development? In fact, if several of us did this, we'd have a really interesting "chronicle of the efforts it took us to actually make a spin."
Christopher
music mailing list music@lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/music
On Wed, Dec 26, 2012 at 9:16 AM, Christopher Antila crantila@fedoraproject.org wrote:
I'm itching to go into full-on blogging / tweeting mode on this.
Why not start right away, with a blog post that describes your involvement in the spin's development? In fact, if several of us did this, we'd have a really interesting "chronicle of the efforts it took us to actually make a spin."
Well ... sounds like a plan. The first thing I need to do is update the README on my AlgoCompSynth to reflect the existence of the spin in the nightly builds.
https://github.com/znmeb/AlgoCompSynth/blob/master/README.md
I should have that done late tomorrow Pacific Standard Time.