That sounds great. I just finished submitting grades and have quite a bit
of flexibility now. Let me know what works and I can come over for a visit.
On Mon, May 6, 2019 at 12:08 PM Wes Turner wrote:
> Michele,
>
> Welcome! I'm at RPI and we have an active group called the Rensselaer
> Center f
Michele,
Welcome! I'm at RPI and we have an active group called the Rensselaer
Center for Open Source. We should get together and talk about regional
opportunities.
Wes Turner
On Thu, May 2, 2019 at 7:54 AM McColgan, Michele
wrote:
> I'm Michele McColgan from Siena College in update NY. I teac
On Sat, 5 Aug 2017 12:53:56 -0700
Timothy Handojo wrote:
> Hello there! I am (trying to be) a new member here!
>
> My name is Tim, currently a senior Computer Science undergrad student at
> Portland State University in Portland, Oregon, United States. Open source
> technology has been in my hear
Hi venkat!
See below for my reply and please reply to all recipients.
On Tue, 21 Mar 2017 13:01:17 -0400
venkat lingala wrote:
> Hello teachingopensource community,
>
> I am Venkat, currently pursing my masters in computer engineering and I am
> newbee to opensource development.
> Below are my
Hi Sri,
welcome aboard.
Regards,
Shlomi Fish
On Thu, 03 Sep 2015 01:40:37 +
Sriram Ramkrishna wrote:
> Hi Folks!
>
> Wanted to introduce myself to the mailing list and say hello.
>
> I am a engagement team member for the GNOME desktop project. I usually
> work on outreach to pr
I would be interested in teaching it, but I don't think I am able to teach
before completing my masters. I would really like to see it offered and
improved though. I'd be happy to see any college find use the materials,
either individually or as a full course.
After I graduate, I would like to be
Since then, I have written a course on open source software development
and development on Linux systems. It is a semester long course
containing labs, lectures, homeworks, an exam and answer keys. All of
the materials I wrote are licensed to creative commons (BY-SA) and LGPL.
This looks great,
t show how
data moves and is used by an application.
Heidi
-Original Message-
From: tos-boun...@teachingopensource.org
[mailto:tos-boun...@teachingopensource.org] On Behalf Of Dave Neary
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2011 3:52 AM
To: Andrew Hamblin
Cc: TOS List
Subject: Re: [TOS] Introduction t
On Thu, Jun 23, 2011 at 09:52:17AM +0200, Dave Neary wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Andrew Hamblin wrote:
> > The contributor mountain example feels to be problematic, as though it
> > reflects a hierarchy, rather than an open process.
>
> I like the analogy, it seems appropriate. There definitely is a
> hiera
Hi,
Andrew Hamblin wrote:
> The contributor mountain example feels to be problematic, as though it
> reflects a hierarchy, rather than an open process.
I like the analogy, it seems appropriate. There definitely is a
hierarchy in free software projects, and like a mountain, anyone can
climb higher
On Wed, Jun 22, 2011 at 17:05, Andrew Hamblin wrote:
> For this chapter I think a set of 5 true/false questions(I've got a few
> scribbled down, but I'm going to set a 30 min timer and see if I can't
Part of what I like about FOSS interaction is that it is very much
about Analysis/Synthesis/Eval
Thanks Heidi,
And, yes! We would welcome student developers. We currently have a
CS student working on UI improvements in the instructor interface
using html5, and the project has had other very successful and fairly
long-term relationships with other students in the past. One issue is
that per
Hi Shiomi
>
> Nice. But why the erratic capital letters in the middle and end of the name?
The name itself comes from "homework." Since it is on the web, they decided
to call it "webwork." Very clever, right? :) As for the
capitalization, I don't
remember the reasoning behind that. (Although
Welcome Jason!
WeBWorK is an interesting project. It appears that the site has some tasks that
are appropriate for newbies to open source and there are good directions for
developers on where to start. This could provide some interesting student
projects!
Heidi Ellis
Heidi J. C. Ellis
Chair a
Hello Kwade,
>> My name's Eduardo, I am Portuguese and left Europe to work in Brazil
>> where I am currently located.
>>
>> I currently work as CIO/Coordinator in a healthcare company and also
>> with IT Consulting.
>
> Bem-vindo! Very nice to meet you.
>
Obrigado! Nice to meet you too.
> Wa
On Fri, Nov 05, 2010 at 05:57:11AM -0800, Eduardo Marques wrote:
> Hello, I stumbled upon TOS after receiving an article from TechRepublic.
>
> My name's Eduardo, I am Portuguese and left Europe to work in Brazil where I
> am currently located.
>
> I currently work as CIO/Coordinator in a health
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