(Quick remark: I had to dig up your feed.xml from my browser's dev tools; it does not appear to be clearly linked to from the blog home page.)
I know the plethora of channels we currently have does not help with fragmentation. In the case of Yast, you will get nothing from it if:
- you're not receiving posts from yast-devel or factory; and - you have discovered your blog's web feed; and - you are not manually checking out the blog.I worry that meeting these conditions is very easy; for example, I am not receiving posts from yast-devel or factory to avoid swimming in emails, even though I am subscribed to them so as to casually browse their contents in my browser.
What saves the day is indeed planet.opensuse.org, but the only footprint that this webfeed has on thos not already subscribed to it is a Discord echo: https://imgur.com/a/BdRB6Vz. As you can see, there is no per-category filtering and I worry many users won't really pay attention to it because of that.
So yeah, I think you'd reach out to more people if you used news.opensuse.org and had the web feed more discoverable. :)
Le 10/02/2021 à 10:02, Ancor Gonzalez Sosa a écrit :
On 2/10/21 9:50 AM, Ancor Gonzalez Sosa wrote:On 2/9/21 5:18 PM, Adrien Glauser wrote:Dear Ancor Gonzalez Sosa, Fair enough; let me know if you need more details or clarifications regarding my comments. Also I don't see many news regarding Yast development on the web platforms; don't hesitate to drop by from time to time -- I am pretty sure more people would interested in helping if Yast development was more visible!Fun that you mention that. Because we actually blog every two weeks (or even more often) as you can see here: https://yast.opensuse.org/blog/ And every time we publish a blog post, we announce it in the Factory mailing list and in the yast-devel one.And our blog is also aggregated at https://planet.opensuse.org/ So basically I hope we have the mailing lists and the blog presence pretty well covered. I know focus of modern users has turned away from blogs and mailing lists (those are so '90s), but I also hope some information transfer from oldies channels to millennial ones done by those interested in spreading the openSUSE word. ;-) Cheers
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