web/html/docs/translation-quick-start-guide index.php,1.19,1.20
by Paul W. Frields (pfrields)
Author: pfrields
Update of /cvs/fedora/web/html/docs/translation-quick-start-guide
In directory cvs-int.fedora.redhat.com:/tmp/cvs-serv31735
Modified Files:
index.php
Log Message:
Remove out of date versions from listing for now.
Index: index.php
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/fedora/web/html/docs/translation-quick-start-guide/index.php,v
retrieving revision 1.19
retrieving revision 1.20
diff -u -r1.19 -r1.20
--- index.php 3 Mar 2008 17:56:21 -0000 1.19
+++ index.php 4 Apr 2008 13:09:01 -0000 1.20
@@ -12,18 +12,18 @@
<p>The Translation Quick Start Guide, a tutorial for translating Fedora programs and documentation, is available in the following languages:</p>
<!--
- Some of these are redirected to en_US until they are updated by the L10n teams in question.
+ Uncomment these only if they are up to date with the en_US version.
-->
<p><a href="en_US/">US English</a> |
<!-- <a href="el/">Ελληνικά</a> | -->
<!-- <a href="es/">Español</a> | -->
<!-- <a href="fr_FR/">français</a> | -->
-<a href="it/">italiano</a> |
-<a href="ja_JP/">日本語</a> |
-<a href="nl/">Nederlands</a> |
-<a href="pa/">ਪੰਜਾਬੀ</a> |
-<a href="pl/">polski</a> |
-<a href="pt/">português</a> |
+<!-- <a href="it/">italiano</a> | -->
+<!-- <a href="ja_JP/">日本語</a> | -->
+<!-- <a href="nl/">Nederlands</a> | -->
+<!-- <a href="pa/">ਪੰਜਾਬੀ</a> | -->
+<!-- <a href="pl/">polski</a> | -->
+<!-- <a href="pt/">português</a> | -->
<a href="pt_BR/">português brasileiro</a> |
<!-- <a href="ru/">Русский</a> | -->
<!-- <a href="sr/">српски</a> | -->
16 years, 1 month
feed'd front page ready
by Karsten Wade
This weekend I worked with the RSS bits that Ricky committed last week
and put together a 100% functional feed-enabled front page:
http://quaid.fedorapeople.org/websites/index-rss.html
Of course, that is just a static copy, the real changes are in my git
checkout. I made a copy (using rsync) of my local repo to here:
http://quaid.fedorapeople.org/websites/fedora-web/
The changes include a new class for fedora.css. Also, I used the
rss.html that Ricky committed, changing it to be the feed using the new
style, and then pulled that in to index.html with an XInclude. Took a
bit of wrangling to get the CSS to work right inside of the #content
class, but I finally got it done and a bit improved from last time.
Unsure if this is the exact look that we want. I recommend two things:
1. We iterate on this design that I did and get it posted
2. Work on a better replacement, if/as we feel there is one needed
If you all agree, I'll be glad to make the changes into
fp.org/data/content/index.html directly and commit them for further
review. Let me know if the git repo above is useful as-is, if I need to
tweak something, or if you'd prefer that I post patches for review.
- Karsten
--
Karsten Wade, Sr. Developer Community Mgr.
Dev Fu : http://developer.redhatmagazine.com
Fedora : http://quaid.fedorapeople.org
gpg key : AD0E0C41
16 years, 1 month
sharing code
by Craig Thomas
Hello All,
The recent list discussion has, at least, left one important process
question in it's wake:
How do we share changes amongst ourselves before we are ready to both
commit them to master branch, and also Commit to them as ideas and
code as a group?
I have thought of two ways and I like one better than the other, but
by no means pretend to know which is better between the two or if
either are a good idea over all.
So, #1:
-each user in the FAS group websites would have their own git branch,
by default. Changes could be reviewed and cherrypicked into master by
$some_one .
and #2:
-use fedorapeople to host 'personal' git repos. Changes not ready for
prime time, or just seeking broader review and collaboration can be
pulled by anyone. In my test, only the $user can push. Mods that are
$deemed_worthy can be pushed or cherrypicked into master.
I personally like #2, but I think either would solve the problem. I
like it because it leaves the main repo alone and seems to leverage
the power of git's distributed nature; it's fun to play with :-}
I have jotted down some notes on how to get a git repo on people space
to play with. These "worked for me" :
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/CraigThomas/PersonalGitRepo
Would love thoughts and comments about the idea of sharing code before
we are ready to commit it to master.
Thanks for listening,
--
Craig
16 years, 1 month
Linux script
by nnaa emmanuel
Hello !! I´m Emmanuel, a student studying IT in Amsterdam. I was giving an assignment to write a script that will install and configure Apache, MySQL, and PHP on fedora 8 system. I´ve never writing a script before, so it kinda difficult for me to figure out what to write. I would be very grateful if u guys can help me out with this assignment. The deadline for handin is on Friday ( 4th April 2008 ). Thanks a lot !!
---------------------------------
Looking for the perfect gift? Give the gift of Flickr!
16 years, 1 month
Linux OR Bust
by pappajohnsr49
I have 3 Dell Latitude 266mhz /128mb laptops in pretty good shape, but too slow for XP.
I just cant seem to find a version of Linux that fits. A few I tried just froze up .
Who could I talk to... to find a workable version?
I got the laptops for the G-kids. I hate to have to tell em.... " I cant fix this...."
P.S. I cant download it.... I'm on dialup.....
16 years, 1 month
Re: feed'd front page ready
by Richard Harrison
> I'm taking my dog out of this fight seeing as A) I'm alone and B) don't
> have the time to follow up on this.
You're not entirely alone in your sentiments towards simplicity. I too prefer elegance to the fullest degree reasonable.
This debate seems utterly related to usability and interaction design. Note that I am not a user interaction or design engineer; I'm a programmer and can implement anything that someone ELSE can design, but I know better than to pretend to be being gifted at layout stuff. Don't we have any design/interaction folks who can (be enticed, cajoled, coerced, etc. to) weigh in on the visual design and use-flow of the interface?
16 years, 1 month
Project Fedora.
by Kristoffer Salvesen
Hello.
My Windows has just crashed for the tenth time, so I have
desided to trie out fedora (Linux). How would this software work for an
beginner? And on your webpage I can see that there is many different
downloads (Direct Download i386 - Install DVD x86_64 - Install DVD ppc - Install DVD) Wich one is the one I sholud choose? Whats the differensies?
Best regards Kristoffer. (From Norway, the reason for the bad english;)
_________________________________________________________________
Få den nye Windows Live Messenger!
http://get.live.com/messenger/overview
16 years, 1 month
Introduction
by Grady Laksmono
Hello all,
I'm Grady Laksmono and a student who would like to contribute with
Fedora Website project. I'm currently a Web Programmer for College of
Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology at California State
University, Los Angeles. I use PHP in most of the web development work
that I have done, but I'm really curious and have a high desire to
learn more about Python. I'm quite new with the open source
development and how can I contribute to the project, so is there any
specific documentation that can help me to get started? I completed
all of the checklists those are listed on the Wiki page, but I don't
find information for some type of Subversions...?
Thanks,
Grady Laksmono
www.laksmono.com
16 years, 1 month
About Turkish
by Kivanc GUMUSLER
Hi,
Have you got any project about fedora Turkish language site?
If not i can translate site to the turkish.
Thanks for your attention.
--
Kivanc GUMUSLER
16 years, 1 month
news.fedoraproject.org
by Jonathan Roberts
Evening all,
We've been talking for a while about setting up a news.fedoraproject.org
site, for a number of different uses. Thanks to the hard work of Frank
Chiulli we now have a test install of Lyceum on publictest 1 for our use :)
Before moving forward with this, we need to deal with a number of issues:
1) What do we actually want to use the site for?
My thoughts are that we use it for Fedora Weekly News, along with other
marketing stuff such as interviews and announcements - similar to what
press.redhat.com is.
2) Depending on the above, do we want to use Lyceum or Wordpress? Infra
would like us to have whatever solution we use packaged and yumable on
Fedora; Wordpress is already in while Lyceum needs packaging. As I
understand it Lyceum allows us to have multiple blogs and is what's used by
Red Hat Magazine. Wordpress only allows for the one blog, but would also
allow multiple authors/editors on a single blog (I think).
3) Experiment and play - find a work flow that's right for us! We may need
some test material for this, such as an example FWN release or a mock
announcement.
4) We need a theme. I've started on one, and whatever we create for
Wordpress should also work on Lyceum, though we've had some problems with
this! If you're interested to see what I've got so far,
test.questionsplease.org will let you :) I can make this available for
people to use as a base. All I've done is create a simple Wordpress
template that uses the ids and classes from fedora.css, and point at that
for the style sheet. I'll upload this to my fedorapeople space soon...
Anyone is welcome to sign up and we can start adding people in different
roles to the Fedora News blog I created in Lyceum, but the URL for the
install is on another box...Rahul, Frank, can you help me out here?
I think that's all for now. Does anybody have any thoughts or ideas about
this? Ah, and finally, could we keep all replies to the marketing list, if
people think that's appropriate? Better to do everything once than 5 times!
Best wishes, and sorry for all the stuff I've probably forgotten!
Jon
16 years, 1 month