Hi,
On Thu, Jul 24, 2014 at 6:26 PM, Rich Bowen wrote:
> ...* Identify talks that are in a sub-optimal order...
I have 3 talks back-to-back on Nov.18 starting at 14h40. There's a
break between the first two so those would work, but no break between
second and third talk. if one of those can be m
"The" would be a noun in that sentence and not an article.
While I'd prefer standard capitalization, I think the most important
thing is consistent capitalization rules for all talks. Let's pick a
style and use it for all of them.
On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 5:30 PM, Lefty Leverenz wrote:
> Rules v
HI,
> * Identify speakers that are speaking twice at once, or back-to-back
I have two talks back to back on the same day (Monday 350 + 4:50) but I'm good
with that.
Thanks,
Justin
Rules vary, but if you're capitalizing more than the first word then the
last word should be capitalized too, even if it's not usually capitalized.
For example: "A Discussion of When to Capitalize the Word The."
Here's a handy converter: http://titlecapitalization.com/. And here's a
short expl
On 25.07.2014 14:44, Mike Kienenberger wrote:
> Inconsistent capitalization. I'd recommend changing titles to standard
> capitalization rules.
+1 to that. I had "fun" noticing that session titles that were already
correctly capitalized in the submissions got mangled in the schedule.
-- Brane
On Thu, Jul 24, 2014 at 12:26 PM, Rich Bowen wrote:
> * Read talk titles and abstracts - send me edits for grammar, clarity,
> spelling, whatever. Point out boring titles.
I started to go through and send you the full list of changes, but
then realized it'd be faster for you to make the changes d
We're delighted to announce the schedule for ApacheCon Europe 2014
http://t.co/yVMgqGW80L
There are still several ways that you can you can help. Examine the
parts of the schedule you care about and:
* Identify talks that are in a sub-optimal order
* Identify speakers that are speaking twice