On Wed, 18 Aug 2010, Patty Langasek wrote: > It probably wouldn't be a bad idea (if it isn't done already) to > have those presentation notes clearly marked and pointed to through > Debian-Women resources (website, IRC, etc.) for people to browse > through, and maybe a live tutorial reguarly (I'm thinking every 6 > months or so?) to keep it fresh in any developers' minds. It'd be > nice if those tutorials were open to anyone interested in Debian > bug-squashing, too.
I'd love to see a tutorial about bug-squashing on any level written up in WML and placed in a prominent place under the www.debian.org/Bugs/ hierarchy. If someone could take the lead on this, I'm fine with answering questions, editing, and/or committing the final bits.[1] [Also if someone wants to totally rework the BTS documentation, that'd also be awesome.] Don Armstrong 1: Or better, getting commit access to webml; you don't need to be a DD to have it. -- It can sometimes happen that a scholar, his task completed, discovers that he has no one to thank. Never mind. He will invent some debts. Research without indebtedness is suspect, and somebody must always, somehow, be thanked. -- Umberto Eco "How to Write an Introduction" http://www.donarmstrong.com http://rzlab.ucr.edu -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-women-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20100819010605.gl22...@rzlab.ucr.edu