Jump to content

FLOSS Manuals: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
resized the logo down a bit... 306px is way too large
Ab aditya (talk | contribs)
External links: Added FOSS widget
Line 33: Line 33:
*Adam Hyde: Free Manuals for free software. Talk at [[Wikimania]] 2007, Taipei. [http://wikimania2007.wikimedia.org/wiki/Proceedings:AH1 Abstract] <!--Video available via http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2007_videocasts - currently not reachable-->
*Adam Hyde: Free Manuals for free software. Talk at [[Wikimania]] 2007, Taipei. [http://wikimania2007.wikimedia.org/wiki/Proceedings:AH1 Abstract] <!--Video available via http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2007_videocasts - currently not reachable-->


{{FOSS}}
{{website-stub}}
{{website-stub}}



Revision as of 11:27, 7 May 2009

FLOSS Manuals
TypeNGO and Non-profit Foundation
Location
FieldsSoftware Freedom
Key people
Adam Hyde
Websiteen.flossmanuals.net

The FLOSS Manuals (FM) is a non-profit foundation founded in 2006 and based in the Netherlands. The foundation is focused on the creation of quality documentation about how to use free software.

Its web site is a wiki (using the TWiki software) focused on the collaborative authoring of manuals. The documentation is licensed under the GPL. Although initially the manuals were covered by the GFDL, the license was changed due to concerns about the limited and non-free nature of the GFDL. [1]

Anyone can contribute to the material at FLOSS Manuals. Each manual has a maintainer – very much like the Debian maintainer system. The maintainer keeps an overview of the manual and discuss with those interested the structure etc. The maintainer is also responsible for gathering new contributors together. All edits are not 'live' – the edits are published to the manual when ready. This is to ensure the quality of the manuals is as high and as reliable as possible and that no new user encounters 'half finished' content.

Manuals are available as HTML online, or indexed PDF. Additionally manuals can be remixed so anyone can create their own manual and export to indexed PDF, HTML (zip/tar) or a 'ajax' include.

In fall 2007, Floss manuals was awarded a 15,000 Euro prize by the Dutch Digital Pioneer fund. [2] It has also been financially supported by Google and NLnet.[3]

References