Is the developer wiki is the ideal place to communicate with end-users? There's no denying these are pretty good looking docs with plenty of screenshots, the top of the page is clearly aimed at developers and will just scare off most end users that do manage to find it. (end users are unlikely to visit the dev wiki)
Even if they do find it, and make it past the first page there's following progression: - Pipeline talk - end-user: Eek! - Downloading from the website! - end-user: Yay - Scary looking 10 line regex - end-user: Eek! - Using steam! - end-user: Yay This page just seems to have no idea who its audience is and it makes for a somewhat incoherent experience for all parties involved. --Ray On 2021-07-16 9:40 a.m., James Monteath via Bf-committers wrote: > Hi all, > > Nightly builds are now available on Steam (BETA) test branches and Snap > channels. > > **Steam** > The automated delivery of *2.93 / 2.83 LTS - Candidates* > and *3.0 - Alpha* builds are now accessible via Steam (BETA) Test branches. > Blender nightly builds are available for all supported platforms on Steam. > > Using Steam Test Branches: > https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/Infrastructure/BuildBot#Using_Steam_Test_Branches > > **Snap** > For Linux systems with Snap support, *2.93 / 2.83 LTS - Candidates* > and *3.0 - Alpha *builds can be refreshed using channels. > > Using Snap Test Channels: > https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/Infrastructure/BuildBot#Using_Snap_Test_Channels > > Cheers ! _______________________________________________ Bf-committers mailing list Bf-committers@blender.org List details, subscription details or unsubscribe: https://lists.blender.org/mailman/listinfo/bf-committers