Hi Brian, 2009/5/28 Brian Cameron <[email protected]>: > Overall, I like the new proposal. However, a fairly significant group > of people who use the GNOME website are developers who work on GNOME > or want to write a GNOME application. Wouldn't it make sense to have > some more high-level or visible links to the most important developer > resources? Perhaps a high-level page with links to things like API > documentation, release team information, GIT pointers, forums to get > help, information about how the community uses IRC, etc. I'd think most > of this information is already on live.gnome.org, but it seems the > website should point the direction for developers.
I think this kind of content would go in Support->Developers. At least that's what I would expect. --lucasr >> Thanks to everyone on the marketing list, but especially Stormy, Lucas and >> Claus for helping with this, and helping me bring it together. >> >> The original pages to be included in the wgo revamp can be found here: >> http://live.gnome.org/GnomeWeb/TwoPointTwentyseven/Content >> >> We have reviewed the current pages, and are making a recommendation to >> revamp these pages significantly. >> The following bullet points are our first draft of a new recommended site >> map. Items in parantheses ( ) are initially out of scope for 2.28, and will >> be in scope for 2.30. (Though if more writers volunteer, or if the >> community feels strongly about a certain page, it could be subject to >> change). >> >> Please let me know your feedback and comments. I will be updating lgo >> tonight to reflect these changes. >> >> Top level navigation (We also recommend only one navigation bar, not two): >> >> About >> Products >> Download >> Support >> Community >> Contact >> >> Sitemap with sub-pages: >> >> About (Index includes project overview, history, mission, desktop, >> platform) >> • History >> • Foundation >> >> Products: >> • Desktop (www.gnome.org/desktop <http://www.gnome.org/desktop>) >> ∘ Why GNOME Desktop? >> ∘ (Take the Tour) >> ‣ (Slide 1) >> ‣ (Slide 2) >> ‣ (etc.) >> ∘ (Testimonials) >> ∘ (Deployments) (Success Stories) >> • Platform (www.gnome.org/platform <http://www.gnome.org/platform>) >> ∘ Why GNOME Platform? >> ∘ (Take the Tour) >> ‣ (Slide 1) >> ‣ (Slide 2) >> ‣ (etc.) >> ∘ (Testimonials) >> ∘ (Users) (Success Stories from GNOME-based product developers) >> ∘ Submit your product (Instructions to encourage developers to bring their >> products to the GNOME platform - git, mailing lists, etc) >> >> Download (Index provides overview on the subpages.) >> >> • Distributions >> • Installation >> • Live Images (torrents.gnome.org <http://torrents.gnome.org>) >> • GNOME applications on Microsoft Windows >> • GNOME applications on Mac OS X >> • Latest sources (cgit?) / release notes >> >> Support (Index provides pointers to End User Documentation, Forum, and >> Bugzilla and an overview on the subpages.) >> >> • For System Administrators >> • For Developers (get an account via mango, etc) >> • (For Companies - such as commercial support options) >> • (For providers) >> >> Community (Index provides pointers News, and an overview on the subpages.) >> >> * User Groups >> * Participate (ie. teams) >> * Friends of GNOME * Sponsors >> >> >> Contact >> >> * Press/Media >> * Foundation >> >> >> Paul >> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >> -- >> marketing-list mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list > > -- > marketing-list mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list > _______________________________________________ gnome-web-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-web-list
