Mike Dawson and several other deployment folks are discussing with me a
serious following meeting/camp/summit around early/mid December in
London, UK -- as this looks to be a great fit alongside the highly
relevant intl development conf -- that several of us hope to attend:
http://www.ictd2010.org
Bernie Innocenti wrote:
El Thu, 03-06-2010 a las 13:13 +0200, Tomeu Vizoso escribió:
Those are very well done, you can give them again in the next Sugar Camp.
Speaking of which... when would be a good time for you? And where could
we do it this time?
After organizing two camps in the US and two in Europe, for a change we
may want to consider Latin America. Unfortunately, flights from US and
Europe are really expensive, something like $700-1000.
Why you don't use Ikiwiki? It has a git backend and the colleagues at
Collabora use (and maintain it), their blogs are syndicated in our
planet.
I like Ikiwiki because it shares many of the design ideas with my own
wiki, including being really minimalistic and orthogonal.
However, I'm afraid I fell into an open source lock-in trap: over the
years, I've evolved GeekiGeeki to perfectly fit 100% of my web presence
needs: blogging, photo/video gallery, project pages, notes... Now that
it fits me like a shoe, switching to something else would be simply
unthinkable :-)
Anyway, RSS/Atom support takes very little effort after adding globs and
sorting to the syntax for template inclusion:
http://codewiz.org/wiki/blog-all?a=raw
This is what it produces:
http://codewiz.org/wiki/blog-all
And this is the (bogus) Atom output:
http://codewiz.org/wiki/blog-all?a=atom
I still need to think of a general way to prevent automatic escaping of
tags in the header and footer... Then I could refactor the templates in
such a way that would let me throw away all the special-purpose python
code from the first iteration.
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