I only highlighted 200-300 words to indicate that Twitter won't work by
itself, but I agree with everything you said.
On Tue, Dec 7, 2021 at 2:27 PM Brent Baude <bbaude(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Frankly I think the word count is irrelevant. Our organized
articles,
generally of higher quality, should still go to SysAdmin. But for other
things, I sure wish I had a place to do stuff. I've already forgotten all
of the topics I have queued up and probably lost for good. Besides that, I
would like to be able to develop an online presence outside of twitter,
which really isn't my thing.
Brent
On Tue, Dec 7, 2021 at 9:32 AM Scott McCarty <smccarty(a)redhat.com> wrote:
> Máirín,
> Hmm, that's an interesting idea. I think there are many times the
> response is sub 280 characters, but often, I'd say they are around 200-300
> words. Mostly nuggets with no intro or conclusions, just meaty little
> tidbits with less context/background/etc. As Brent mentioned, a lot of the
> time they are time sensitive so we want to get them out in minutes/hours,
> and often the information is stale later, though often it's valid for a
> long time. Today, we will publish this info on Twitter and personal blogs,
> but then it's splattered all over the Internet and hard to find (heck, we
> can't even remember where we put it a lot of the time.
>
> I hope that helps. I don't think any of us have a strong opinion on the
> technical solution, basically our requirements are:
>
>
> 1. Easy to use, no PR process
> 2. Fast
> 3. 200-300 words
> 4. Shows up on the podman.io site somewhere obvious
>
> Any disagreements?
>
>
> Best Regards
> Scott M
>
> On Thu, Dec 2, 2021 at 10:48 PM Máirín Duffy <duffy(a)fedoraproject.org>
> wrote:
>
>> Maybe a specific hashtag from a specific listed group of twitter
>> accounts and use twitter as the interface?
>>
>> ~m
>>
>> On December 2, 2021 3:46:47 PM EST, Tom Sweeney <tom.sweeney(a)redhat.com>
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> More of a Twitter-esque interface. Something without the overhead of
>>> creating and merging a PR, but still have it be indexable later on for easy
>>> reference.
>>>
>>> t
>>>
>>> On 12/2/21 14:00, Brent Baude wrote:
>>>
>>> Seth,
>>>
>>> We still plan to contribute to sysadmin. I do not think much will
>>> change there. What we were looking for more specifically was a timely way
>>> to get little nuggets out to people quickly. Like hey, this question came
>>> in; thought others might be interested type things.
>>>
>>> On Thu, Dec 2, 2021 at 10:16 AM Seth Kenlon <skenlon(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>>>
>>>> I work on
Opensource.com and
redhat.com/sysadmin, and we love the
>>>> Podman content we've been getting from you all. I'm happy to work
on ways
>>>> to make the publishing process quicker and easier for Podman articles.
>>>>
>>>> If a separate blog solution is best for the project, though, then
we'd
>>>> be interested in cross-posting, if that's of interest to you.
>>>>
>>>> Either way, we're here to assist, so feel free to reach out and let
us
>>>> know how we can best help the project.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers.
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, Dec 1, 2021 at 12:34 PM Máirín Duffy <duffy(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hey, a couple of thoughts on the podman.io blog issue brought up
>>>>> during the last Podman community cabal call (
>>>>>
https://podman.io/community/meeting/notes/2021-11-18/) -
>>>>>
>>>>> Summary: Podman has a need for a low-overhead of posting blog posts;
>>>>> the current system involves other websites and platforms and is
>>>>> process-heavy. (Hopefully this is an accurate summary, lmk if not.)
>>>>>
>>>>> - One option would be to use wordpress which has a post-by-email
>>>>> feature... you have to keep the email you send the posts to secret
/ only
>>>>> share w people authorized to post / otherwise there is no overhead
/
>>>>> process to getting posts live. Appears it may be possible to then
import
>>>>> the wordpress RSS feed into the existing jekyll site with smtg
like this
>>>>>
https://github.com/MattKevan/Jekyll-feed-importer
>>>>> - Other option (perhaps better) - use antora instead of jekyll.
>>>>> GitHub pages supports antora, it lets you have a site generated
from
>>>>> multi-repos, believe it would enable stuff like taking snippets
from the
>>>>> podman repo's docs and pulling into the website in a diff
repo. Could
>>>>> create another repo just for informal blog content, give everyone
you'd
>>>>> ever want to post a blog full commit access just to that repo,
antora can
>>>>> read in from that and use it to generate blog posts on website
(and authors
>>>>> wouldn't need commit access to website)
>>>>>
>>>>> Relevant links:
>>>>>
>>>>> - WP post by email
https://jetpack.com/support/post-by-email/
>>>>> - Antora github pages support
>>>>>
https://docs.antora.org/antora/2.3/publish-to-github-pages/
>>>>> - Antora multi-repo functionality
>>>>>
https://docs.antora.org/antora/2.3/features/#bring-together-content-from-...
>>>>>
>>>>> My experience is with Jekyll and not Antora but I am currently
>>>>> playing around with Antora to see if I can get a multi-repo
>>>>> proof-of-concept together. If someone more technically ept would like
to
>>>>> help, let me know :) I am @duffy:fedora.im on Matrix and in the
>>>>> Podman channel!
>>>>>
>>>>> Le meas,
>>>>> ~m
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> Podman mailing list -- podman(a)lists.podman.io
>>>>> To unsubscribe send an email to podman-leave(a)lists.podman.io
>>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>
>>>
>>>
>> --
>> Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>
>
> --
>
> --
>
> The final of a six part series on open source and product management:
https://opensource.com/article/21/10/open-source-product-market
> --
>
> Scott McCarty
> Product Management - RHEL Server
> Email: smccarty(a)redhat.com
> Phone: 312-660-3535
> Cell: 330-807-1043
> Web:
http://crunchtools.com
>
> _______________________________________________
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>
--
Scott McCarty
Product Management - RHEL Server
Email: smccarty(a)redhat.com
Phone: 312-660-3535
Cell: 330-807-1043
Web: