Gentoo Documentation Project
1.
Project Description
What we do, and who we are
The Gentoo Documentation Project (GDP) is responsible for the creation and
maintenance of all official Gentoo documentation. The GDP is not a closed team
of any sorts, but instead an open community committed to critiquing, and
possibly integrating, viable user documentation.
Mission Statement
The Gentoo Documentation Project was formed to address the need of
complete documentation for Gentoo. In doing so, the GDP team is committed
to the creation and maintenance of clear, concise, and original
documentation. We will protect our users and developers by the use of
free and open licensing on all documentation. The GDP is committed to
remaining a free and open project, and will abide by the Social Contract
set forth by the Gentoo Project.
2.
Developers
| Developer |
Nickname |
Role |
| Sven Vermeulen |
swift |
Member ( Editor ) |
| Flammie Pirinen |
flammie |
Member ( Editor ) |
| Jan Kundrát |
jkt |
Member ( Editor ) |
| Joshua Saddler |
nightmorph |
Member ( Project Manager ) |
| Łukasz Damentko |
rane |
Member ( Editor ) |
| Joseph Jezak |
josejx |
Project Doc Editor ( PPC ) |
| Mike Frysinger |
vapier |
Project Doc Editor ( Portage ) |
All developers can be reached by e-mail using nickname@gentoo.org.
3.
Subprojects
The Documentation
project has the following subprojects:
| Project |
Lead |
Description |
|
Internationalisation
|
Joshua Saddler |
The Internationalisation Subproject oversees and coordinates the translation efforts of the Gentoo Documentation Project. |
4.
Resources
Resources offered by the
Documentation
project are:
5.
Status Updates
What are Status Updates?
A status update is a small text covering what the GDP has done since the
previous status update. It is written by the operational manager and contains a
quick overview on how the GDP progresses. If you want to know what lives in the
GDP, and what is in the process of developing, this is what you should read.
Status updates don't usually talk about fixed bugs and updated documentation,
although that is the main task of the GDP.
Listing
The following status updates are available:
- December 16th, 2005
- October 18th, 2005
- September 6th, 2005
- August 1st, 2005
- June 30th, 2005
- May 29th, 2005
- April 13th, 2005
- March 7th, 2005
- January 2, 2005
- November 21, 2004
- October 21, 2004
- September 24, 2004
- August 7, 2004
- July 30, 2004
- May 17, 2004
- May 3, 2004
- April 15, 2004
- March 27, 2004
- March 8, 2004
- February 19, 2004
- February 5, 2004
- January 17, 2004
- January 2, 2004
- December 17, 2003
- December 6, 2003
- November 24, 2003
- November 13, 2003
- October 31, 2003
6.
Participating
gentoo-doc@lists.gentoo.org
The Gentoo Documentation Project makes intensive use of the
gentoo-doc@lists.gentoo.org mailing list. On this mailing list discussions about
documentation, subprojects, translations and more pass by.
To subscribe to this mailing list, send an empty e-mail to
gentoo-doc+subscribe@lists.gentoo.org. Once subscribed you can post to it by
sending an e-mail to gentoo-doc@lists.gentoo.org. To unsubscribe from the list,
send an empty e-mail to gentoo-doc+unsubscribe@lists.gentoo.org. There is also
an online archive on news.gmane.org.
Participating
To participate in the Gentoo Documentation Project first join the mailing list
at gentoo-doc@lists.gentoo.org. Then ask if there are plans to support something
that you are interested in, propose a new subproject that you are interested in,
or choose one of the planned subprojects to work on. You may talk to the
developers and users in the IRC channel #gentoo-doc on irc.freenode.net for more
information or just to chat about the project or any subprojects. If you don't
have the ability to actively help by contributing work we will always need
editors to maintain the quality and accuracy of the overall product. All
development, editing, and productive comments and feedback will be greatly
appreciated.
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