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Date:      Thu, 28 Dec 2006 07:23:11 -0600
From:      linimon@lonesome.com (Mark Linimon)
To:        "Eric P. Scott" <eps+pqry0612@ana.com>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.org, "Simon L. Nielsen" <simon@FreeBSD.org>
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD 6.2-RC2 Available
Message-ID:  <20061228132311.GA22749@soaustin.net>
In-Reply-To: <200612281254.kBSCscUU027061@anna.ana.com>
References:  <200612281254.kBSCscUU027061@anna.ana.com>

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On Thu, Dec 28, 2006 at 04:54:38AM -0800, Eric P. Scott wrote:
> You need to try to put yourself in an end user's frame of reference.  It's
> easy to understand why even fairly experienced folks can find FreeBSD
> documentation baffling.

The FreeBSD Documentation Project is always in search of new volunteers.
There are parts of the documentation that are, to put it charitably, a
little bit dusty.  (Clearly the preferential listings for floppies speaks
of this).

See http://www.freebsd.org/docproj/ for the best introduction on what the
doc project is, and how to contribute.  We have mailing lists (one for
-doc, and one for -www; the latter is about things that appear only on
the website).  We also have an IRC channel.

Basically, we have much more work than available volunteers right now.
I think you have some good ideas; the best thing, of course, would be if
you could develop patches (the subset of SGML that we use is really not
a very difficult markup language to learn), but if not, perhaps you can
participate on the freebsd-doc@ mailing list and see if you can attract
any interest in specific proposals.

Further discussion on this topic should probably go to -doc rathern than
-stable.  Thanks.

mcl



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