Mad Penguin Launches Slackware Handbook Project
An anonymous reader writes "Mad Penguin's Adam Doxtater and Narayan Newton have launched a community-driven site dedicated to bringing the power and depth of the FreeBSD Handbook to Slackware Linux users. The site allows for the community to create and edit its own content. A simple voting system is in place to make sure the content that makes it into the handbook is of the highest quality. This is something that has been needed for some time and the idea of being able to edit our own material is really nice. A very unique project. Read the press release at LinuxPR.com."
...to keep content of high quality. Now where have I seen something like that?
Clicky
There is already an ongoing project updating the official slackware book at http://slackbook.lizella.net/. For the most part, this work provides most information about daily admin tasks that anyone would need. Why is there this new project, then?
Let me be the first to wish them the best. I've been putting together a little "handbook" of my own (not nearly as ambitious as mimicking the excellent FreeBSD handbook, of which I own a hard copy incidently). Of course, anyone is free to contribute provided they license their writing under the GPL for inclusion. Basically it's a rewrite of the Slackware Linux Essentials book by Chris Lumens, Logan Johnson, and David Cantrell. You can find it here. I call it "The Unofficial Revised Slackware Book Project". Stop by and take a look, I think you'll enjoy it.
Props to these guys and their project, and I'd like to point out to them that can use anything at the above site provided they do so under the GPL.
Slackware, what else when it must be secure, stable, and easy?
So much so that well... they said it best.
Sigs? We don't need no stinking sigs!
Too many connections
Line #31 certainly has to go.
An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
dedicated to bringing the power and depth of the FreeBSD Handbook to Slackware Linux users
phew. for a moment there i thought they misspelled "death".
Jokes aside, what's so remarkable about documentation that everyone contributes that warrant s a news post? If I started a "all you need to know about open source" wiki and posted the link, would it be accepted? (if so, it's time to get some advertisers and start rehashing news)
This is a wonderful step for Slackware. The FreeBSD Handbook is an incredible reference and guide, and every OS should have something similar....
;)
But what of the 100+ other gnu/linux distributions out there? One of linux's greatest strengths (and weaknesses) is the insane number of distributions and the sometimes strikingly large differences between distros. This book will work for Slackware, and maybe help with a few of the slack-based distros... but probably won't be much help for fedora, gentoo, or the other distros.
But what do I know... I'm just a silly FreeBSD user, and this is only my two cents.
Best of luck w/ the slackware handbook!
/dev/random
The FreeBSD handbook rules. But there's also the FreeBSD Wiki: FreeBSD wiki Which certainly needs more members.
The site allows for the community to create and edit its own content. A simple voting system is in place to make sure the content that makes it into the handbook is of the highest quality. This is something that has been needed for some time and the idea of being able to edit our own material is really nice. A very unique project.
Actually, it's not unique.
The content mangement appears to be Drupal with a modified Marvin 2k theme.
Drupal has had these features forever.
Move along now.
Real programmers can write assembly code in any language. -- Larry Wall
This is definately a project I would like to see some press behind, it is far from "unique." Slackwiki has been around for quite a while.
You mean you & the 3 other users made a book waiting for your system to compile?