I am wondering about the use case: I typically need the documentation on the system that I need documentation about. The only eReaders I am ware of are fbreader and calibre. fbreader is in the 14.04 rpos as version 0.12.10, their website claims 0.99.0 is in beta, so 14.04 seems to be lagging a bit, maybe? Similarly, calibre is in my repo as version 1.25, the latest on the website is 2.10. I have to ask: what's the point of releasing documentation in a format for which no current reader is available? Maybe there is a good reader for xubuntu and I don't know about it, in that case, apologies.
On 11/16/2014 05:26 PM, Stephen Michael Kellat wrote: > Based upon discussions on another list that need not necessarily be discussed > here, a tangential question came up about our use of DocBook for maintaining > xubuntu-docs. Since we theoretically can export to EPUB from DocBook, what > would it take to make e-reader friendly versions of the documentation? Would > we be willing/able to make xubuntu-docs for 14.04 and 14.10 available from > xubuntu.org as a test we could receive user feedback on prior to the end of > the Vivid cycle? I don't have a full use case yet but wanted to throw the > idea out there first before I lost it. > > Stephen Michael Kellat > Team/Docs > -- xubuntu-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-devel
