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commit 7d769de8ce1a7b4dd3ea72ad7f37793a3eabb1d5
Author: buildbot <us...@infra.apache.org>
AuthorDate: Sun Dec 15 09:41:20 2024 +0000

    Automatic Site Publish by Buildbot
---
 output/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html     | 2 +-
 output/blog/visualizing_the_aoo_dev_list.html | 2 +-
 output/feeds/all-en.atom.xml                  | 4 ++--
 output/feeds/blog.atom.xml                    | 4 ++--
 output/list-conduct.html                      | 2 +-
 output/orientation/intro-contributing.html    | 2 +-
 output/orientation/intro-development.html     | 2 +-
 output/orientation/intro-doc.html             | 2 +-
 8 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)

diff --git a/output/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html 
b/output/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html
index 7200d6e..6ef1988 100644
--- a/output/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html
+++ b/output/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html
@@ -162,7 +162,7 @@
   <div class="entry-content">
     <p>This is an April Fool's post: it is a humorous work and it does not 
describe actual developments.<br/></p>
 <p>As we on the Apache OpenOffice project put the final touches on our 4.1 
release, we've started planning for our next major release, version 4.2, 
hopefully out sometime mid-year. One of the exciting new features we're looking 
forward to is support for the <b>OpenCash Protocol</b>, the new open standard 
for on-demand funding and delivery of both traditional currencies as well as 
the new cryptocurrencies.</p>
-<p>For several years it has been possible, with expensive proprietary systems, 
to do convenient on-demand funding and printing of postage stamps.&nbsp; The 
OpenCash protocol advances this to the next level, extended to currencies, and 
in an way that makes it accessible to users on all platforms. </p>
+<p>For several years it has been possible, with expensive proprietary systems, 
to do convenient on-demand funding and printing of postage stamps.&nbsp; The 
OpenCash protocol advances this to the next level, extended to currencies, and 
in a way that makes it accessible to users on all platforms. </p>
 <p>We're still early in the design phase for this feature, but the gist of it 
can be seen in the following UI prototype: <br/></p>
 <div align="center"><img 
src="../images/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to_OpenCash.png"/></div>
 <p> The basic flow would be: <br/></p>
diff --git a/output/blog/visualizing_the_aoo_dev_list.html 
b/output/blog/visualizing_the_aoo_dev_list.html
index fca30d2..addb7e9 100644
--- a/output/blog/visualizing_the_aoo_dev_list.html
+++ b/output/blog/visualizing_the_aoo_dev_list.html
@@ -166,7 +166,7 @@
 <p>The above image illustrates the social network of posts and responses to 
the Apache OpenOffice project's main development mailing list, from when it 
started in May 2011 until the end of March 2013 when this data was 
collected.&nbsp; (Click on the image to view a larger version)&nbsp; <br/></p>
 <p>Each circle represents a person posting to the mailing list.&nbsp; The arcs 
represent responses to posts, i.e., they are drawn from the person posting to 
the person to whose post they are replying.&nbsp; The weight of each line is 
proportionate to the number of times person X responded to person Y.&nbsp; So 
darker lines portray more frequent communication pathways.&nbsp; The size of 
each circle is proportionate to the poster's <a 
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betweenness#Eigenvec [...]
 <p>Overall the graph has 1077 nodes (persons) and 8181 arcs (response 
emails).&nbsp; On average each person responded to 7.6 other persons, and made 
27.1 total responses. </p>
-<p>Now some interpretation.&nbsp; This is not the the "hub and spokes" or tree 
pattern of a 
+<p>Now some interpretation.&nbsp; This is not the "hub and spokes" or tree 
pattern of a 
 command/control or hierarchical organization, but a complex organism, 
 with project participants contributing at various levels of engagement.&nbsp; 
The larger circles in the center, connected with many and darker lines, are the 
core project participants (at least on the development list).&nbsp; The very 
small circles at the periphery of the graph are those who posted a single 
question, received a response were never heard of again.&nbsp; They typically 
received one or two response posts, but did not really engage further. And in 
the middle we see additiona [...]
 <p>It is difficult to ascribe too much meaning to these email response 
patterns.&nbsp; Some mailing lists have been the topic of research 
before.&nbsp; In Q&amp;A forums, where nearly 100% of the initial posts are 
questions, and responses are all answers, it is interesting to look at the 
response patterns as an indication of expertise.&nbsp; See <a 
href="http://wwwconference.org/www2008/papers/pdf/p665-adamic.pdf";>Adamic, et 
al.</a>, for a good example.&nbsp; We might apply a similar ana [...]
diff --git a/output/feeds/all-en.atom.xml b/output/feeds/all-en.atom.xml
index f5275fa..26373e2 100644
--- a/output/feeds/all-en.atom.xml
+++ b/output/feeds/all-en.atom.xml
@@ -1189,7 +1189,7 @@ OpenOffice suite has been downloaded a whopping 100 
million times." &lt;/span&gt
 </content><category term="blog"></category></entry><entry><title>Apache 
OpenOffice 4.2 to Bring OpenCash Support</title><link 
href="https://openoffice.apache.org/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html"; 
rel="alternate"></link><published>2014-04-01T02:04:52+00:00</published><updated>2014-04-01T02:04:52+00:00</updated><author><name></name></author><id>tag:openoffice.apache.org,2014-04-01:/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html</id><summary
 type="html">&lt;p&gt;This is an April Fool's post: it is a  [...]
 &lt;p&gt;As we on the Apache OpenOffice project put the final touches on our 
4.1 release, we've started planning for our next major release, version 4.2, 
hopefully out sometime mid-year. One …&lt;/p&gt;</summary><content 
type="html">&lt;p&gt;This is an April Fool's post: it is a humorous work and it 
does not describe actual developments.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;As we on the Apache OpenOffice project put the final touches on our 
4.1 release, we've started planning for our next major release, version 4.2, 
hopefully out sometime mid-year. One of the exciting new features we're looking 
forward to is support for the &lt;b&gt;OpenCash Protocol&lt;/b&gt;, the new 
open standard for on-demand funding and delivery of both traditional currencies 
as well as the new cryptocurrencies.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;For several years it has been possible, with expensive proprietary 
systems, to do convenient on-demand funding and printing of postage 
stamps.&amp;nbsp; The OpenCash protocol advances this to the next level, 
extended to currencies, and in an way that makes it accessible to users on all 
platforms. &lt;/p&gt;
+&lt;p&gt;For several years it has been possible, with expensive proprietary 
systems, to do convenient on-demand funding and printing of postage 
stamps.&amp;nbsp; The OpenCash protocol advances this to the next level, 
extended to currencies, and in a way that makes it accessible to users on all 
platforms. &lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;We're still early in the design phase for this feature, but the gist 
of it can be seen in the following UI prototype: &lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;div align="center"&gt;&lt;img 
src="../images/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to_OpenCash.png"/&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
 &lt;p&gt; The basic flow would be: &lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
@@ -1975,7 +1975,7 @@ product in this way, in movies and in US and UK 
television programs. Why use Ope
 &lt;p&gt;The above image illustrates the social network of posts and responses 
to the Apache OpenOffice project's main development mailing list, from when it 
started in May 2011 until the end of March 2013 when this data was 
collected.&amp;nbsp; (Click on the image to view a larger version)&amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;Each circle represents a person posting to the mailing 
list.&amp;nbsp; The arcs represent responses to posts, i.e., they are drawn 
from the person posting to the person to whose post they are 
replying.&amp;nbsp; The weight of each line is proportionate to the number of 
times person X responded to person Y.&amp;nbsp; So darker lines portray more 
frequent communication pathways.&amp;nbsp; The size of each circle is 
proportionate to the poster's &lt;a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/ [...]
 &lt;p&gt;Overall the graph has 1077 nodes (persons) and 8181 arcs (response 
emails).&amp;nbsp; On average each person responded to 7.6 other persons, and 
made 27.1 total responses. &lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Now some interpretation.&amp;nbsp; This is not the the "hub and 
spokes" or tree pattern of a 
+&lt;p&gt;Now some interpretation.&amp;nbsp; This is not the "hub and spokes" 
or tree pattern of a 
 command/control or hierarchical organization, but a complex organism, 
 with project participants contributing at various levels of 
engagement.&amp;nbsp; The larger circles in the center, connected with many and 
darker lines, are the core project participants (at least on the development 
list).&amp;nbsp; The very small circles at the periphery of the graph are those 
who posted a single question, received a response were never heard of 
again.&amp;nbsp; They typically received one or two response posts, but did not 
really engage further. And in the middle we s [...]
 &lt;p&gt;It is difficult to ascribe too much meaning to these email response 
patterns.&amp;nbsp; Some mailing lists have been the topic of research 
before.&amp;nbsp; In Q&amp;amp;A forums, where nearly 100% of the initial posts 
are questions, and responses are all answers, it is interesting to look at the 
response patterns as an indication of expertise.&amp;nbsp; See &lt;a 
href="http://wwwconference.org/www2008/papers/pdf/p665-adamic.pdf"&gt;Adamic, 
et al.&lt;/a&gt;, for a good example.& [...]
diff --git a/output/feeds/blog.atom.xml b/output/feeds/blog.atom.xml
index 9b46e85..51a212c 100644
--- a/output/feeds/blog.atom.xml
+++ b/output/feeds/blog.atom.xml
@@ -1189,7 +1189,7 @@ OpenOffice suite has been downloaded a whopping 100 
million times." &lt;/span&gt
 </content><category term="blog"></category></entry><entry><title>Apache 
OpenOffice 4.2 to Bring OpenCash Support</title><link 
href="https://openoffice.apache.org/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html"; 
rel="alternate"></link><published>2014-04-01T02:04:52+00:00</published><updated>2014-04-01T02:04:52+00:00</updated><author><name></name></author><id>tag:openoffice.apache.org,2014-04-01:/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to.html</id><summary
 type="html">&lt;p&gt;This is an April Fool's post: it is a  [...]
 &lt;p&gt;As we on the Apache OpenOffice project put the final touches on our 
4.1 release, we've started planning for our next major release, version 4.2, 
hopefully out sometime mid-year. One …&lt;/p&gt;</summary><content 
type="html">&lt;p&gt;This is an April Fool's post: it is a humorous work and it 
does not describe actual developments.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;As we on the Apache OpenOffice project put the final touches on our 
4.1 release, we've started planning for our next major release, version 4.2, 
hopefully out sometime mid-year. One of the exciting new features we're looking 
forward to is support for the &lt;b&gt;OpenCash Protocol&lt;/b&gt;, the new 
open standard for on-demand funding and delivery of both traditional currencies 
as well as the new cryptocurrencies.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;For several years it has been possible, with expensive proprietary 
systems, to do convenient on-demand funding and printing of postage 
stamps.&amp;nbsp; The OpenCash protocol advances this to the next level, 
extended to currencies, and in an way that makes it accessible to users on all 
platforms. &lt;/p&gt;
+&lt;p&gt;For several years it has been possible, with expensive proprietary 
systems, to do convenient on-demand funding and printing of postage 
stamps.&amp;nbsp; The OpenCash protocol advances this to the next level, 
extended to currencies, and in a way that makes it accessible to users on all 
platforms. &lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;We're still early in the design phase for this feature, but the gist 
of it can be seen in the following UI prototype: &lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;div align="center"&gt;&lt;img 
src="../images/blog/apache_openoffice_4_2_to_OpenCash.png"/&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
 &lt;p&gt; The basic flow would be: &lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
@@ -1975,7 +1975,7 @@ product in this way, in movies and in US and UK 
television programs. Why use Ope
 &lt;p&gt;The above image illustrates the social network of posts and responses 
to the Apache OpenOffice project's main development mailing list, from when it 
started in May 2011 until the end of March 2013 when this data was 
collected.&amp;nbsp; (Click on the image to view a larger version)&amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;Each circle represents a person posting to the mailing 
list.&amp;nbsp; The arcs represent responses to posts, i.e., they are drawn 
from the person posting to the person to whose post they are 
replying.&amp;nbsp; The weight of each line is proportionate to the number of 
times person X responded to person Y.&amp;nbsp; So darker lines portray more 
frequent communication pathways.&amp;nbsp; The size of each circle is 
proportionate to the poster's &lt;a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/ [...]
 &lt;p&gt;Overall the graph has 1077 nodes (persons) and 8181 arcs (response 
emails).&amp;nbsp; On average each person responded to 7.6 other persons, and 
made 27.1 total responses. &lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Now some interpretation.&amp;nbsp; This is not the the "hub and 
spokes" or tree pattern of a 
+&lt;p&gt;Now some interpretation.&amp;nbsp; This is not the "hub and spokes" 
or tree pattern of a 
 command/control or hierarchical organization, but a complex organism, 
 with project participants contributing at various levels of 
engagement.&amp;nbsp; The larger circles in the center, connected with many and 
darker lines, are the core project participants (at least on the development 
list).&amp;nbsp; The very small circles at the periphery of the graph are those 
who posted a single question, received a response were never heard of 
again.&amp;nbsp; They typically received one or two response posts, but did not 
really engage further. And in the middle we s [...]
 &lt;p&gt;It is difficult to ascribe too much meaning to these email response 
patterns.&amp;nbsp; Some mailing lists have been the topic of research 
before.&amp;nbsp; In Q&amp;amp;A forums, where nearly 100% of the initial posts 
are questions, and responses are all answers, it is interesting to look at the 
response patterns as an indication of expertise.&amp;nbsp; See &lt;a 
href="http://wwwconference.org/www2008/papers/pdf/p665-adamic.pdf"&gt;Adamic, 
et al.&lt;/a&gt;, for a good example.& [...]
diff --git a/output/list-conduct.html b/output/list-conduct.html
index 06313e7..6ae7204 100644
--- a/output/list-conduct.html
+++ b/output/list-conduct.html
@@ -207,7 +207,7 @@ infrastructure-private.  Anything you read in a private 
list is confidential and
 not to be spoken of, or copied to people who are not members of that private
 list.</p>
 <p>Note:  the other side of respecting the private lists is to use them only 
when
-necessary, and for for topics that require confidentiality, such as information
+necessary, and for topics that require confidentiality, such as information
 that deals with security vulnerabilities, personnel matters, user private
 information, etc.</p>
 <h1 id="9-there-are-going-to-be-exceptions-to-the-rule">9. There are going to 
be exceptions to the rule<a class="headerlink" 
href="#9-there-are-going-to-be-exceptions-to-the-rule" 
title="Permalink">&para;</a></h1>
diff --git a/output/orientation/intro-contributing.html 
b/output/orientation/intro-contributing.html
index fd144bf..97263dd 100644
--- a/output/orientation/intro-contributing.html
+++ b/output/orientation/intro-contributing.html
@@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ Apache, then much of this will already be familiar to 
you.</p>
 </ol>
 </li>
 <li>
-<p>Finally, once you have done the above, go to our our <a 
href="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/Directory+of+Volunteerss";>Directory
 of Volunteers</a> wiki page and add your information. Congratulations! Please 
send a note to <a 
href="mailto:recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org?subject=Completed%20Introduction%20to%20Contributing%20to%20Apache%20OpenOffice%20Module";>recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org</a>
 so we know.</p>
+<p>Finally, once you have done the above, go to our <a 
href="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/Directory+of+Volunteerss";>Directory
 of Volunteers</a> wiki page and add your information. Congratulations! Please 
send a note to <a 
href="mailto:recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org?subject=Completed%20Introduction%20to%20Contributing%20to%20Apache%20OpenOffice%20Module";>recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org</a>
 so we know.</p>
 </li>
 </ol>
 
diff --git a/output/orientation/intro-development.html 
b/output/orientation/intro-development.html
index e79ef49..b4526b6 100644
--- a/output/orientation/intro-development.html
+++ b/output/orientation/intro-development.html
@@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ Although there are many other combinations of flags you can 
use, some of which a
 <li>The <a href="/mailing-lists.html#commits-mailing-list">commits mailing 
list</a> echos every checkin made to the code base. Developers are encouraged 
to subscribe so they are aware of other changes, and can help review.</li>
 </ul>
 <h2 id="module-completion">Module Completion<a class="headerlink" 
href="#module-completion" title="Permalink">&para;</a></h2>
-<p>Once you have completed this Module, go to our our <a 
href="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/Directory+of+Volunteers";>Directory
 of Volunteers</a> wiki page and add or update your information. 
Congratulations! Please send a note to <a 
href="mailto:recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org?subject=Completed%20Introduction%20to%20Development";>recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org</a>
 so we know.</p>
+<p>Once you have completed this Module, go to our <a 
href="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/Directory+of+Volunteers";>Directory
 of Volunteers</a> wiki page and add or update your information. 
Congratulations! Please send a note to <a 
href="mailto:recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org?subject=Completed%20Introduction%20to%20Development";>recruitm...@openoffice.apache.org</a>
 so we know.</p>
 
   </div>
 
diff --git a/output/orientation/intro-doc.html 
b/output/orientation/intro-doc.html
index 679c19a..a03f576 100644
--- a/output/orientation/intro-doc.html
+++ b/output/orientation/intro-doc.html
@@ -197,7 +197,7 @@
 </ol>
 <p>We can then bring you up to speed on what we're currently working on.</p>
 <h2 id="module-completion">Module Completion<a class="headerlink" 
href="#module-completion" title="Permalink">&para;</a></h2>
-<p>Once you have completed this Module, go to our our <a 
href="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/Directory+of+Volunteers";>Directory
 of Volunteers</a> wiki page and add or update your information. 
Congratulations! Please send a note to <a 
href="mailto:d...@openoffice.apache.org?subject=Completed%20Introduction%20to%20Documentation";>d...@openoffice.apache.org</a>
 so we know.</p>
+<p>Once you have completed this Module, go to our <a 
href="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/Directory+of+Volunteers";>Directory
 of Volunteers</a> wiki page and add or update your information. 
Congratulations! Please send a note to <a 
href="mailto:d...@openoffice.apache.org?subject=Completed%20Introduction%20to%20Documentation";>d...@openoffice.apache.org</a>
 so we know.</p>
 
   </div>
 

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