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Blog Guidelines

31 bytes added, 11:58, 13 September 2022
Blogs in DPS909/OSD600/SBR600/SPO600
In the open source world blogs are one of the main vehicles for general discussions about technical and project issues. One of the main reasons for this is that open source projects are interconnected, and developers working on one project want to follow what is happening in other projects. Users also like to know what is happening behind the scenes with their favourite software. Blogging is a great way to reach new people who share similar interests to you. Sites like http://digg.com, http://slashdot.org, and others facilitate this.
The volume of blog postings created within a community can be overwhelming. To help deal with this, RSS or Atom feeds enable the receipt of content in a machine-readable format so that it can be used in a variety of different ways (for example, in Firefox [http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/livebookmarks.html Live Bookmarks], through a service such as [http://www.google.com/reader Google Reader], or in a program such as [http://liferea.sourceforge.net/ Lifrea] or [http://www.feedreader.com/ FeedReader]).
Many open-source community maintain a [http://planetplanet.org Planet] site which aggregates the feeds from community members into a single page (and the Planet, in turn, provides an aggregated feed). Here are some examples:
* Fedora Planet - http://planet.fedoraproject.org/
The Seneca open source Planet is [https://telescope.cdot.systems Telescope]. To create an account on Telescope, use the Sign Up button.
= Blogs in DPS909/OSD600/SBR600/SPO600 =
You are required to blog '''twice''' per week on things related to the course, your project, your readings, etc. If you haven't blogged before, spend some time reading other people's blogs.
You will receive separate blogging instructions for each of your courses. In general, you'll submit some of your weekly work and project reports by blogging. You are also encouraged to comment on postings by other people.
=Posting Guidelines=
Your blog is an integral part of your work in your open source course(s). Blog postings will be made available to other students, faculty, and the general public via the web and your RSS/Atom feeds, and your postings will appear on [https://telescope.cdot.systems Telescope].
# Create a separate blog for your personal postings.
# Use a feed for the Telescope that only includes articles tagged with a certain word or classified into a certain category, and then ensure that articles that do not meet these guidelines are not tagged or classified in such a way that they are picked up in the feed.
 
 
= Access to Blog Posts =
 
It's important that your professor be able to easily access your blog posts for a particular date range. Some blog software and blog ''themes'' provide easy access to your posts and some make it very difficult. Please don't frustrate your prof -- and risk having them miss some of yours posts! -- by using a configuration that makes it hard to find your posts.