Re: Debian training and code review
- To: debian-project@lists.debian.org, debian-publicity@lists.debian.org
- Subject: Re: Debian training and code review
- From: Alexander Reichle-Schmehl <alexander@schmehl.info>
- Date: Thu, 16 Sep 2010 13:09:41 +0200
- Message-id: <[🔎] 4C91FAF5.50804@schmehl.info>
- In-reply-to: <20100916074045.GA24638@enricozini.org>
- References: <20100914085346.GA9209@upsilon.cc> <20100915030857.GA1280@upsilon.cc> <20100915072659.GA11462@xanadu.blop.info> <87pqwfjvz5.fsf@windlord.stanford.edu> <87fwxbquvo.fsf@gkar.ganneff.de> <1284541176.2573.77.camel@havelock> <i6rsv6$5lg$1@dough.gmane.org> <20100916074045.GA24638@enricozini.org>
Hi!
Am 16.09.2010 09:40, schrieb Enrico Zini:
>> Random though: we could encourage people to write about different topics,
>> post them to a wiki page (wiki.d.o/education/<topic>/<sub-topic if
>> necessary>) and then post it on a blog that is syndicated by planet (a
>> personal blog should be enough, a persistent copy would be at the wiki
>> anyway.)
>
> A series of posts on -planet about best practices would be a very
> welcome thing indeed, and a quick way to get this started right now by
> everybody who'd like to do it.
>
> I'd love it to see it eventually go a step up, like having some review
> process by people with especially strong experience, and having them
> published by an own blog (à-la debian-administration) where they can be
> archived and searched. But that's just one of the many improvements the
> idea can start to collect once it starts happening.
And an other example, what could be made available via
"blog.debian.org", if that ever get's started.
Best regards,
Alexander
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