Difference between revisions of "DPS909 and OSD600 Fall 2014 Notes"
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*** [https://twitter.com/codinghorror/status/507680549712838656 naming fallout] | *** [https://twitter.com/codinghorror/status/507680549712838656 naming fallout] | ||
*** [http://blog.codinghorror.com/standard-markdown-is-now-common-markdown/ a third attempt, Common Markdown (2014)] | *** [http://blog.codinghorror.com/standard-markdown-is-now-common-markdown/ a third attempt, Common Markdown (2014)] | ||
+ | *** [https://twitter.com/codinghorror/status/508027568839479297 ...and finally http://commonmark.org] | ||
* Discussion of Class Projects: enabling browser based cloud sharing | * Discussion of Class Projects: enabling browser based cloud sharing |
Revision as of 19:45, 5 September 2014
Week 1
- Course introduction
- Question: What is Open Source? Why work on Open Source as a student?
- Success in this course requires:
- Willingness to be lost and not panic
- Curiosity
- Being driven, persistence
- Willingness to ask for help
- Willingness to give others help
- Independent learning
- Doing more, much more, than the bare minimum
- What are Seneca and Seneca students capable of accomplishing? Some examples
- Intro to open source
- TODO
- Create an account on this wiki for yourself (note: requires manual creation)
- Add your info to the Fall 2014 Open Source Students page.
- Create a blog (wordpress or blogspot or whatever) and create a feed category or tag called "open source"
- Read the Blog Guidelines for instructions on how to use your blog in the course
- Add your blog feed and info to the Open Source@Seneca Planet List so that it appears in the OpenSource@Seneca Planet
- Pick one Closed and one Open license/EULA, and read them from start to finish. Pick 3 things that struck you, blog about it and your reactions to the readings this week.
- Begin learning how to use IRC for communication. We'll cover this in detail next week, but it's better to get started early.
Week 2
- Open/Closed Licenses
- Discussion of findings in license readings from week 1
- Case Study: Markdown and open licensing, open standards, forking, blogging, and Twitter
- Markdown 1.0.1 (2004)
- Markdown's license
- Markdown is used everywhere, by everyone
- calling out a maintainer (2009)
- call for standardization of Markdown (2012)
- failed attempt to standardize (2012)
- podcast of Gruber discussing Markdown
- a second attempt, Standard Markdown (2014)
- Standard Markdown rejected
- the difficulty with standardizing
- naming fallout
- a third attempt, Common Markdown (2014)
- ...and finally http://commonmark.org
- Discussion of Class Projects: enabling browser based cloud sharing
- Filer - https://github.com/js-platform/filer
- MakeDrive - https://github.com/mozilla/makedrive
- Brackets - http://brackets.io/
- Nimble - https://github.com/mozilla/nimble.webmaker.org
- Appmaker - https://github.com/mozilla-appmaker/appmaker
- Mobile Appmaker - https://github.com/mozillafordevelopment/mobile-appmaker/
- Release 0.1
- Implement du in Filer
- You will learn git, github, JavaScript, node.js, npm, Filer, code review
- You must fix the bug yourself and have it reviewed by another student *and* review another student's implementation (i.e., do a pull request against another student's fork, and vice versa)
- TODO
- Sign-up for a case study and begin researching and immersing yourself - 2014 Open Source Project Case Study
- Reading: The Cathedral and the Bazaar