Hello! <br><br>Seems like it is pretty much working already! <br>
<br>
That would be great for <a href="http://fi.flossmanuals.net/" target="_blank">fi.flossmanuals.net</a> too! <br>
<br>
Does
it have statistics, since currently we don't really know the
amount of readers? <br>
<br>
Regards<br>
Tomi<br><br><br><div class="gmail_quote">2009/12/18 adam hyde <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:adam@flossmanuals.net" target="_blank">adam@flossmanuals.net</a>></span><br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
ola,<br>
<br>
so...FM lab has been busy behind the scenes. As many know, we have<br>
received some funding support from the OSI and Archive.org for the<br>
development of a new collaborative authoring platform. The platform has<br>
been mentioned several times on this list as a future cure all for our<br>
technical wishes and frustrations, a revolution in publishing, a<br>
promise, and a vague idea which may or may not be happening.<br>
<br>
Well, I am very pleased to say that Booki has been happening, and it is<br>
in pretty good shape. We are now in a position to show the FM Community<br>
what we are working on and invite discussion about the project.<br>
<br>
Before proceeding, I want to make it clear that we are not yet<br>
interested in bug reports. The platform is alpha and we wish to do a lot<br>
more work on it before we start testing on scale. However, when we are<br>
ready to start testing I invite everyone on this list to consider<br>
helping us test the platform. I will post to the list specific testing<br>
request and information on how to submit bug reports when the time<br>
comes.<br>
<br>
For now what we are primarily interested in is your thoughts on the<br>
possibilities for the platform, and any comments you may wish to make<br>
good, bad or otherwise. We are also looking for people to help us<br>
immediately in the following ways:<br>
* help us find some more $ for development. I would like to find $25,000<br>
USD from somewhere quickly if possible to continue the development. If<br>
you know where we can find this then now is your time to help out! :)<br>
* become a developer (primarily the platform is written in python)<br>
* help us document that platform so that developers know what it is we<br>
are doing and can find a place to start<br>
* give us a fat new machine and free rackspace to host the project<br>
<br>
The dev team consists of Aco and Douglas, with me being the distracting<br>
milestone manager ;) So far the development has split into two threads -<br>
booki development which is done by Aco, and the import (espri) and<br>
export (objavi) components which are developed by Doug.<br>
<br>
For those that are interested in helping with the dev, please see see<br>
here:<br>
<a href="http://booki-dev.flossmanuals.net/" target="_blank">http://booki-dev.flossmanuals.net/</a><br>
<br>
for the git repos etc.<br>
<br>
We also have a dev channel in irc:<br>
<a href="http://irc.freenode.net" target="_blank">irc.freenode.net</a><br>
#fm-tech<br>
<br>
ok...a few words about Booki and what it is. First, as mentioned above,<br>
Booki is really a ecosystem of 3 technologies. The namesake code base<br>
(Booki) is where users create accounts, create books, and collaborate.<br>
Booki interacts with Objavi, the export engine, to export to book<br>
formatted PDF, screen formatted PDF, Openoffice (odt), and epub. Booki<br>
also interacts with Espri, the import engine, to import from<br>
Archive.org, and any epub that is online. Espri will also, in time,<br>
manage imports from FLOSS Manuals, and Wikibooks.<br>
<br>
So, the set up is a little different from FM as we know it. At its heart<br>
- a tech for the collaborative development of books - Booki and FM are<br>
the same and many of the tools look the same but they act slightly<br>
differently - you will see when you look at the edit interface for<br>
example.<br>
<br>
On another level, Booki is quite different from FM. Not in just the way<br>
the background code is structured, but the ideas manifest in the<br>
interface will be new to many. For example, Booki works with users and<br>
groups. FM is one group, in our example installation, and we have many<br>
groups. A book is created and owned by a Booki user, and that book can<br>
be associated with none, one, or more groups. For example, Inkscape may<br>
wish to develop several manuals, and associate some with FM, associate a<br>
subset of these with the 'Free Software for Design' group, associate<br>
some books only with the Free Software Development Group etc.<br>
<br>
This is quite different from how we act now, and it raises a lot of<br>
interesting questions and exciting new possibilities for working<br>
methodologies.<br>
<br>
Also, the Booki user has much more control and many of the admin tasks<br>
that are solely mine in FM are farmed out to owners/maintainers etc. For<br>
example, publishing will be the responsibility of the owner/maintainer<br>
and we place these tools in their hands.<br>
<br>
Also, we have a very interesting focus on importing content.<br>
Specifically, Archive.org has 1.6 million books which are available as<br>
epubs. You can import any of these into booki and work on them. Many of<br>
these are fantastically interesting books...take a look at the<br>
<a href="http://archive.org" target="_blank">archive.org</a> text archive and you will see.<br>
<br>
Additionally, books can be uploaded immediately to Archive.org..this is<br>
the start of us providing more distribution channels for content. If you<br>
can imagine, books might also be made available by rss, torrent, iphone<br>
download etc etc etc<br>
<br>
So...one last word before I post the URL. Doug and Aco have done a<br>
stellar job. They are both amazing to work with and I think Booki is<br>
going to become more and more extraordinary. Many many thanks to them<br>
both for being such a pleasure to work with and for doing such<br>
outstanding work.<br>
<br>
have a peep:<br>
<a href="http://www.booki.cc" target="_blank">http://www.booki.cc</a><br>
<br>
note : There is NO design in place yet, and you will discover bugs,<br>
thats not the point. Try and get a feel for the ideas inherent in the<br>
tool. This is what we are interested in discussing.<br>
<br>
adam<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
--<br>
Adam Hyde<br>
Founder FLOSS Manuals<br>
German mobile : + 49 177 4935122<br>
Email : <a href="mailto:adam@flossmanuals.net" target="_blank">adam@flossmanuals.net</a><br>
irc: <a href="http://irc.freenode.net" target="_blank">irc.freenode.net</a> #flossmanuals<br>
<br>
"Free manuals for free software"<br>
<a href="http://www.flossmanuals.net/about" target="_blank">http://www.flossmanuals.net/about</a><br>
<br>
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</blockquote></div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Best Regards<br>Tomi Toivio<br>Open Source Coordinator<br><a href="http://fi.flossmanuals.net/" target="_blank">http://fi.flossmanuals.net/</a><br><a href="mailto:tomi@flossmanuals.net" target="_blank">tomi@flossmanuals.net</a><br>
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