On Fri, Jan 15, 2010 at 7:24 AM, Chris Jerdonek <[email protected]> wrote: >> Date: Thu, 14 Jan 2010 22:32:11 -0800 >> From: Alex Milowski <[email protected]> >> Subject: [webkit-dev] MathML Project Contact etc. >> >> I'm presenting my MathML in WebKit work tomorrow at the Joint AMS/MAA >> meeting here in San Francisco. After looking through my slides I feel >> that I'm unsatisfied with what I'm telling people about where to go for >> more information or to contribute to the project. >> >> I'd like a better way for: >> >> * MathML in WebKit related discussions to take place, >> * dissemination of status, >> * collection of test cases, plans, roadmaps, >> * builds of a MathML enabled WebKit for testers. > > Thanks, Alex. I realize some of this is probably covered by your earlier > post: > > https://lists.webkit.org/pipermail/webkit-dev/2010-January/011328.html > > What were you originally going to tell people as far as the above four > things and where to go to contribute?
Since I haven't figure this out yet, I'm just enumerating my list of places where I'd like help and I'm asking people to contact me. I'd like a better story there (e.g. join this mailing list). Basically, the wiki is a great place for me to disseminate information but I need a way for people to raise issues as testers or "concerned" individuals. As they aren't developers, webkit-dev seems like the wrong place. The MathML implementation in Mozilla has its own mailing list, as is the general practice for a lot of the major components of Mozilla. That's not the case for WebKit, which is really good in many ways, but I think you all might not be so interested in random questions about MathML. I would also like to put up a build server so people can get and test the mac version. I don't have a machine that I can put to this task yet. It would have to regularly pull the source and apply a set of patches as I suspect most of my code will be in patches for quite awhile. Ideally, the best outcome would be a binary distribution with a place for testers to chat about their experiences, problems, and other issues. -- --Alex Milowski "The excellence of grammar as a guide is proportional to the paucity of the inflexions, i.e. to the degree of analysis effected by the language considered." Bertrand Russell in a footnote of Principles of Mathematics _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev

