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Where Can You Post Your Technical Experiences?

Dishwasha asks: "For the past several months I have spent an inordinate amount of time wrestling with video conferencing. The compatibility issues between different video conferencing equipment and network hardware are enough to make a seasoned network administrator pull their hair out. When it comes down to it, there's not a lot of good documentation on how to actually implement video conferencing. I'd like to help other people save time by sharing my experiences, but I don't have the time or resources to maintain what would ultimately be just a few unorganized web pages. Has anybody set up a website and/or forum for submitting general HOWTO's? I'd envision something similar to Linuxdoc but categorized by technology and moderated."

44 comments

  1. Transformers! First Post in Disguise!!! by sithkhan · · Score: -1

    What you are bidding on is my husband's collection of Generation 1 Transformers. His mother kept them in several boxes for him. They have been kept organized into 3 different boxes. The biggest box is the actual Transformers. Another small box is for the little guns, and other little nick-nacks that came with them. Another little box is for the instructions on all the Transformers, and their info-cards (red). These have been played with, but are in very good condition. Some are in little pieces in the bottom of the box. There are only a couple of little Transformers that might be broken, but the pieces are there. The big Transformers are in very good condition. The stickers are in fair to good condition. Some still have their stickers in the bag. There are so many pieces that it would take me weeks to figure out what transformer they all go to. There are literally hundreds of little pieces! My husband also doesn't remember what goes with who. I know some of their names such as: Optimus Prime, Jetfire, Galvatron, and I can't think of the others. There is also this parascope toy that really works. On it are several other little toys such as telescopes and a flashlight, and a whistle and a measuring tape. This is a very fun toy. The only thing missing is the battery cover. It may or may not be in the bottom of the box. I have not looked for it yet. There are 2 dino-bots, and there is that big walking dino-bot. There are a few planes, and there are a few "casettes". One or two of the casettes has missing parts, but they may be in the bottom of the boxes. It is possible that their are a lot more transformers (small ones) in the bottom of the 2 boxes in peices. If you would like for me to look for a specific Transformer, jut let me know and I will try to spot it. Just describe it for me. We have closed on our first home, and need to come up with funds to have a fence built for my sons new puppy. We are wanting to get rid of the things we don't use. Take advantage of this sale!

    These toys are in very good condition. The ones that need batteries also still run. My husband always takes care of his things.

    ~~~Please check out our other items for auction, as I will also be selling his collection of comic books and other various items. I put it to him like this, "Which do you want more: A house? Or the things you never look at that you have forgot that you even have?" You know what his answer was, as you can see what we have for auction!! ~~~

    My husband and I just bought our very first home. This is our dream home. Let me tell you our story. Everyone loves to hear a good story. After you read this, you will know that dreams do come true and that there really is a God!

    After much discussion, my husband has agreed to sell some of his possessions as providing items for our new home is more important than keeping old toys.

    I am originally from California. I am 30 years old-soon to be 31 in May. My husband (Jonathan) is 25-will be 26 in December. I have a 7-year-old son (Chris) from a previous marriage (my second marriage). My son will be 8 in October.

    We have been living in an apartment for the last three years. Apartment living has been ok-we at least have a roof over our heads, beds to sleep in, food to eat, clothes to wear, and so on. We are very fortunate, grateful, and appreciative.

    As I told you before, I have been married more than once. Three times to be exact. My first husband committed suicide only one year after we had been married. After my first husband died, I moved to West Virginia to be closer to my mother and sisters. Here is where I met my second husband. We were married a year later, and then we had a son. We had been married for 3 years when extra-marital circumstances arose from my spouse, and I had no choice but to divorce.

    I was separated from my second husband for a year and a half when I met my third (and final) husband, Jonathan. My divorced had just been finalized.

    Jonathan and I met in a very unusual manner: in an Internet chat room. Pict

    --

    is it that bad seein a hot chick again? if i see a hot chick walkin down the hall i dont say "repost"
  2. Blog ! by nsebban · · Score: 1

    Run your own blog, where you describe your work and you answer visitors' questions. You can even get slashdotted if it's interesting enough :)

    --
    ____
    nico
    Nico-Live
    1. Re:Blog ! by BrynM · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or just use your Slashdot Journal and let Slashdot Slashdot itself.

      --
      US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
  3. Blow Holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Whales have blow holes, which allow them to shoot their technical experience into the air.

  4. What you are proposing is tough to achieve by prostoalex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Since you're looking for a more or less generalized database of human knowledge. Even a categorized database of computer knowledge would be extremely broad and informative.

    The modest solution with modern-day technology is still quite basic:
    1) Create an HTML page describing your experience.
    2) Use keywords and clear title so that people will find you.
    3) Submit to Google.
    4) Submit to some sites that cover the topics specific to your case. Most of the online publications will gladly accept free content, if it matches their topic.

    1. Re:What you are proposing is tough to achieve by larien · · Score: 1
      It isn't that bad an idea, using Google (or, as someone else has said, Google Groups). Hell, I've put up stuff that even Sun has referenced!

      However, it is still a klunky interface to the problem, notably that (a) there are disparate levels of quality across sites and indexability (if that's even a word) and (b) sites can come and go. What the submitter wants is a site where people can dump their experiences for others to find, the idea being that through time, a catalogue of problems & solutions is generated.

    2. Re:What you are proposing is tough to achieve by orasio · · Score: 1


      1) Create an HTML page describing your experience.
      2) Use keywords and clear title so that people will find you.
      3) Submit to Google.
      4) Submit to some sites that cover the topics specific to your case. Most of the online publications will gladly accept free content, if it matches their topic.
      5) ...
      6) Profit!!

  5. Write an article. Submit it to publications. by xanderwilson · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Send a bunch of query letters to publications, online and off. There's definitely a market for articles like this.

    Alex.

  6. Be sure to let us know if you find somewhere by SteWhite · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I for one would be very interested in this info.

    I recently got a webcam, and I'm having a hell of a time getting decent videoconferencing through anything at all.

    Yahoo Messenger works but not in super webcam mode, giving a wonderful 1.5 FPS. MSN Messenger works but not with audio. Etc...

    I'm on ADSL going through a router using NAT and a firewall.

    1. Re:Be sure to let us know if you find somewhere by alatesystems · · Score: 1

      im at work right now, email me at chris at talkingNOSPIZAMtoad.com and i can help you get it working. it's just a port you have to forward. i think it's 5100. try that

      chris

  7. Two ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Set up your own technical blog. Doesn't need tons of personal information or frequent updates, just things you learn/stumble across.

    OR...

    Find an appropriate usenet newsgroup, and post to it.

  8. googlegroups by nocomment · · Score: 1

    I always try there after my initial googling fails. I am usually able to turn over a few stones there and find what I'm looking for.

    --
    /* oops I accidentally made a comment, sorry */
    /* http://allyourbasearebelongto.us */
  9. Serious Question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    3) Submit to Google.

    How do you "submit to Google" [obvious double entendre/sexual innuendo notwithstanding]?

    Is there a form you can fill out that says "Please send your spider to this DNS Address/Path/Filename and cache the contents you find there"? Is this a free service, or does Google charge you for the effort?

    1. Re:Serious Question... by spencerogden · · Score: 1

      There is a form, one of the links at the bottom of the homepage, through which you can submit a domain to be spidered. You cannot submit a specific document.

    2. Re:Serious Question... by itwerx · · Score: 2, Informative

      How do you "submit to Google" [obvious double entendre/sexual innuendo notwithstanding]?

      Is there a form you can fill out...[snip]


      At risk of responding to a troll (and getting modded Flamebait :)

      If you go to the Google main page and click on "Services and Tools" (pretty logical so far) you'll find a link to a "Site Map".
      And if you click on that you'll see a link to a submission form in the lower right-hand corner.

      There, that wasn't so hard was it?

      (In other news detailed instructions were given for nose-blowing and ass-wiping.)

    3. Re:Serious Question... by itwerx · · Score: 1

      Er, no, there is no submission link at the bottom of the home page. See my illuminating prose in this same thread for the real deal.

    4. Re:Serious Question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, dear sir, are a cock. Did you need to add the snide comment?

      Ass. Cock and ass.

    5. Re:Serious Question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You cannot submit a specific document.

      Yes you can. Google doesn't care.

  10. interesting! I suggest a blog. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I too have wondered where to put "stuff I figure out". For instance I've figured out a lot of stuff on Linux and OS X that I couldn't find in one well-written place, I've figured out how to disassemble various products like TVs and computers and would like to write down my experience so others don't make the same mistakes I did like cut through an important wire, etc.

    Mostly very short little paragraphs, not even sure how I would organize some of them.

    I think the best thing would be to just put them in RSS format and get together with a bunch of other like-minded folks to create a searchable archive. All the feeds could be combined on each site, like a cross between a web-ring and an agreggator.

    Just a thought as I really wouldn't want to go out of my way to give out free advice but if it was easy I would do it.

  11. UseNet by FreeLinux · · Score: 2, Informative

    I would recommend that you ues UseNet for this. Write up your how-to or knowledgebase document so that it CLEARLY explains the problem and the appropriate steps to resolve it. For an example format get a knowledgebase article from Microsoft or Novell. Then post it to the appropriate newsgroup, making sure to use a clear simple title that acurately describes the issue (think about the keywords you searched for when you first encounterd the problem). Google takes care of the rest for you by archiving the message for posterity. Then, whenever you or anyone else needs that information again, it is a simple matter of searching Google Groups for your post.

  12. The Web is a DB by mugnyte · · Score: 2, Informative
    Using the current method of unorganized information transfer:

    Compile it into an easy-to-read website with minimal reliance on anything more than JPG and HTML.

    Find a moderate web host that can scale when you need it

    Submit this page with a fully relevant meta/title tag to the leading search engines.

    Sit back and watch sites mirror yours and the content appears zipped up on the P2Ps. Branched/Appended version will flower everywhere.

    Congratulations! You've just provided valuable content to the world without imposing any new barriers of entry.

    mug

  13. Use Usenet/Google Groups as your data repository! by DaveJay · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I recommend posting (via Google or whatever means you find appropriate) a detailed and well-written summary of the problem and your solution, with keywords.

    - - -

    I did this over a year ago after banging my head against a wall for weeks getting my Gateway FDP1500 LCD monitor to work with my GeForce MX DVI card under Linux.

    I stumbled across a solution that someone had posted to a mailing list, but the site had been taken offline, so the only copy available was from Google's cache. Luckily, I saved a local version of the cached page, because a short time later the information no longer came up on google search at all.

    Determined to keep this information out there for others to see (and because I knew I'd lose my copy sooner or later) I wrote a short how-to article with the necessary monitor specs and XF86-Config settings, then submitted it to comp.os.linux.setup via Google Groups.

    Just this month, I discovered that Suse (like most other distributions, Knoppix being a notable exception) still doesn't configure X properly with this monitor, and my personal copy of the info was long gone. So I searched on Google Groups for "Gateway FPD1500", and up came my posting: "Gateway FPD1500 LCD Monitor -- how to make it work under Linux."

    - - -

    The key here is to post your article in the appropriate newsgroup, and make your article stand out from the normal, casual conversation by making it highly informative, well-written and searchable (be descriptive and detailed in your subject line and body copy). This way, it's a genuine contribution to the appropriate newsgroup, rather than something that nobody but you will appreciate or be able to find.

  14. Your Website by np_bernstein · · Score: 1

    I'd put it on your website. If it is well written and informative, people will find it, either via google, or some other engine. Once they do find it, and if it's good, people will link to it. Don't worry about putting it somewhere in particular. One of the nice things about the current incarnation of search engines is that the good stuff really does rise to the top. Plus, you have the added benefit of upping your pagerank. :)

    --
    RandomAndInteresting.comdefending the world from stupidity since 1979
  15. Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Video Conferencing HOWTO: http://www.apple.com/isight/

  16. I found it!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, I found it! All you have to do is go to Google:
    http://www.google.com
    Then click on "Services & Tools," which takes you here:
    http://www.google.com/options/
    Then scroll ALL the way to the bottom, and click on "Site Map," which takes you here:
    http://www.google.com/sitemap.html
    Then scroll ALL the way to the bottom [sound familiar?] and click on "Submission Form," which takes you here:
    http://www.google.com/addurl.html
    It's so easy, it's, like, I dunno, stealing candy from a Sabre Tooth Tiger...

    And for the dipshit with the "nose-blowing and ass-wiping" comment: If there are, say, 20 URLs per page, and if you have to go three pages deep to find a link to the page you're looking for, then you've got about 20^3 = 8000 possible URL trees you would need to traverse before you would randomly stumble upon this little tidbit.

    Me personally? I ain't undertaking a quixotic journey like that unless I've got some assurances that there's a pot of gold at the end of that there rainbow...

    Dipshit. Fuckwad.

  17. For technical problems/questions by $exyNerdie · · Score: 1


    For my technical problems/questions, I generally use www.deja.com. Try the search term video conferencing compatibility issues at the site.

    Duh, yeah, you already know it !!

    1. Re:For technical problems/questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's groups.google.com now. Sure, it redirects, but why waste valuable seconds?

    2. Re:For technical problems/questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      That's groups.google.com now. Sure, it redirects, but why waste valuable seconds?

      If you use internet explorer, try typing in the address bar:
      (a) groups.google.com
      (b) deja (and press Ctrl+Enter Key)

      see which one is faster...

    3. Re:For technical problems/questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or just setup a Mozilla bookmark alias on something like "gg"

  18. Write your own blog. by Will+Sargent · · Score: 1

    I did.

    Admittedly, most of it is incredibly boring if you're just randomly stumbling on it, but I get a fair amount of google hits.

  19. LISA by hbo · · Score: 1

    I second the suggestion of submitting the work to a journal. Specifically, you could submit it to the LISA (Large Installation Systems Administration) conference, and get it into their proceedings. Or you could try ;login, the magazine of USENIX and SAGE.
    Also, there's Sysadmin Magazine. If it's Linux related, there are a whole slew of Linux mags, of course.

    --

    "Even if you are on the right track, you'll get run over if you just sit there" - Will Rogers

  20. ITwiki - A plug, and a prayer by ka9dgx · · Score: 1
    Plug
    Well, this is exactly why I registered ITwiki.com, in hopes that I could build a community site that could become a knowledgebase of just such things. It's a WikiWiki Website, so anyone can edit anything. It's just a personal project, but who knows... might take off.

    Prayer
    I hope my little desktop machine survives slashdotting, and the ravages of the internet.

    --Mike--

    1. Re:ITwiki - A plug, and a prayer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are teh ghey.

    2. Re:ITwiki - A plug, and a prayer by DeltaSigma · · Score: 1

      I like what you've got going on here. If you succeeded, would you move over to a real server?

  21. Or you could go into business for yourself by ralphclark · · Score: 1

    ...as a videoconferencing consultant. Do you have any idea now much money big firms pay out to people like that? Not to mention the cost of the hardware - six-foot plasma screens and the like - which you get at a discount and then mark up substantially.

    If you don't take advantage of this while you can, you must be a dope.

  22. In Soviet Russia... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    ...wiki prayer plugs up you!!

  23. Re:Use Usenet/Google Groups as your data repositor by burns210 · · Score: 1

    Ask.com would be goof for tutorials possibly, or even Wikipedia. Another good idea that has been mentioned, make a well organized clean(and simple! no fancy stuff, just the facts) website and get it on google and what not. Even sharing that text with the above links, along with letting the word out on related websites, and your information will reach it's audience.

  24. epanorama by quiddity · · Score: 1

    epanorama is a very useful expansive digital resource.

    --
    .
    . hmmm
  25. Your own website will be fine. by WoTG · · Score: 1

    Make your own webpage, it doesn't have to be complex. As long as your document uses the keywords that people will google for, people will generally be able to find your page. You would need to get a couple outside links to make sure the search engines index the page, though. Using your homepage URL in your Slashdot profile will suffice.

    It's amazing what happens when obscure words get posted on the web. I get dozens of hits a day on my personal online dumping grounds for a variety of search terms.

  26. And just who the hell is gonna pay for this????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You people should be thankful that Google does this shit for free.

    Earth to /.ers: MONEY DOESN'T GROW ON TREES!!!

  27. "Dear IEEE Magazine..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "... I'm a junior systems integrator at a small midwestern consulting firm. I never thought something like this would happen to me, but..."

  28. Wiki! Join the Wiki revolution by phamlen · · Score: 1

    This is actually what the whole Wiki revolution is for. Wiki is an easy-to-use web-based collaboration system. It's been in use for years at a number of great sites.

    One interesting site, Portland Pattern Repository, contains lots of pages that various programmers have put together to describe their experiences programming. For instance, you can find a lot of information about the Singleton Programming Pattern.

    Another site that really shows the power of Wiki is Sensei's Library (a website for learning Go.)

    So I would look through the available Wiki's and see if any match your intended audience. Then start creating your pages and go to town...

  29. Tech sites by masiman · · Score: 1

    Ars-Technica is a great resource for this kind of thing. Also Experts-Exchange is another good source. Write an article at the least. Submit or post as others have suggested with Wiki, blog, above sites or any other methods mentioned. Hopefully your company has a method to share information. Good on ya for trying to pass on some knowledge.

  30. http://faqts.com/ by shibboleth · · Score: 1

    http://faqts.com/ works and has been around at least a few years. (Be patient after hitting "Save" over there, though; that aspect of the site was plenty slow today.)

    Build a Knowledge Base - for FREE!

    Anyone can build a FAQTs knowledge base. We are always looking for new topic areas and people willing to contribute and edit answers.

    You can set up a new knowledge base yourself immediately, just create the new folders. If you don't feel confident, contact us and we'll do it for you.

    --
    "Be thankful you are not my student. You would not get a high grade for such a design :-)" - Minix pro