Now, back on topic.Hello, Everyone!I'm Gvido, and I'm currently based in Amsterdam.
Missed the introduction thread, so I'll just start with that:
My official job title is front-end developer, but in reality I do full-stack development with ruby or python.
I'm also going to agree with the general sentiment that Jekyll is the way to go. It's stable, simple, widely used, easy to extend, and powerful.
Markdown is really easy to learn, I don't think content creators writing about Tor would have a problem grasping it.
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 6:52 PM, William Papper <william@papper.me> wrote:
Definitely a +1 for Jekyll. There's no need to reinvent the wheel. While a custom solution or plain HTML may seem appealing at first (and would be great for a personal project), Jekyll lets us move much quicker and keeps everything relatively standardized. It also makes it easier for people to collaborate, since Jekyll is widely used.
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 11:57 AM, Moritz Süß <moritz@moritzsuess.de> wrote:
Markdown is _very_ simple.Please check out http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/basics and try out markdown at http://www.markdownviewer.com/.Let’s try to use these as long as possible for getting people familiarized with Markdown. We do not want to duplicate existing documentation efforts, and keep up-front investment for tools as low as possible in this project.I hope I am correct in my understanding that we agree on a static website generator now, and kind-off agree on Jekyll.BestMoritzAm 10.01.2014 um 17:35 schrieb Earl G <globallogins@gmail.com>:Ok So Jekllya user guide for people that need to learn markdown to be able to contribute to the blog.and the front of the site user friendly for anybody that wants to get started.back of the site and deeper for the linux nerds and specialists that want to dig deeper.job done________________________________________________________________________On 10 January 2014 17:32, Sam E. Lawrence <selbrit@gmail.com> wrote:Then they can learn. If someone wants to contribute to a solution to a problem as complex as privacy and security, then learning markdown / HTML should be a minor investment of their time. Basic HTML takes little time to learn, and will instantly boost the self-respect of anyone who wants to help Tor and other software projects. Setting a bar is worth it, IMO.On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 10:10 AM, Sean Rafferty <seanmrafferty@me.com> wrote:
But there are a lot of content writers in the world that just don’t know it well enough.
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