SBR600 Communication Lab
Contents
Purpose
To set up the communication tools that you will need to interact with the Open Source community and complete this course.
Resources
- Communication Tools page
Steps
- Set up a Seneca Wiki account.
- Create a pair of ssh keys (ssh-keygen).
- Send a copy of your ssh public key to your professor (chris.tyler@...) with the subject line "SBR600 Public Key".
- Set up a FAS2 account.
- Create a User page for yourself on the Fedora wiki (example).
- Upload your public ssh key.
- Connect to the Freenode IRC network.
- Choose a nick for yourself and register it.
- Join these channels:
- #seneca
- #fedora
- #fedora-devel
- Observe who is in these channels and the conversations taking place.
- Chat with someone.
- Add an entry to the Winter 2011 SBR600 Participants page.
- Subscribe to these Fedora mailing lists:
- arm
- announce
- devel
- (optional, high-volume): users
- Research the Raspberry Pi project
- Locate the Raspberry Pi forum and wiki
- Set up a blog account.
- Configure the OpenSource@Seneca Planet to include your posts by adding your blog to the Planet CDOT Feed List.
- Create your first blog post.
- Include:
- a self-introduction
- a link to your Seneca wiki user page
- your IRC nick, and a snippet of conversation from IRC
- your Learn ID
- your reflections on and opinion of the Raspberry Pi project
- Check back in 30 minutes to ensure that your post ended up in the Planet
- Include:
Deliverable
Write a blog post which will appear on the OpenSource@Seneca Planet, containing:
- An introduction. Tell us a bit about yourself.
- A portion of an IRC conversation you've had with someone on a Fedora or Seneca IRC channel.
- A link to your User page on the Seneca wiki.
- A link to your User page on the Fedora wiki.
Note: don't just dump this stuff in a blog post, add some introductory text as well!