I realize this is a quite old topic. But it is also pinned as possibly an important topic. Therefore I reply here and don't start a new topic.
Let me first give a brief introduction of myself.
I am Rob. I am Dutch and live in the Netherlands. I am a sysadmin and mainly opensource focussed.
About 12 years ago my children went to a public primary school in the French part of Belgium. This was a special school because lessens were given in both French and Dutch. It was not a very large school, they started in the end of the '90s with less than 50 children. But because of the special character of the school, they quickly grew to over 120 children. As with a lot of public primary schools, especially in the French part of Belgium (with less money available) the accommodation was far from ideal.
I asked the teachers and principal if they were using any kind of ict and what their vision was with ict. They explained they had about 6 10 year old stand alone pc's and a copier. That was it. They had no knowledge, funds or space for anything extra.
Since I was a sysadmin by profession and had some options to make a difference I proposed to start building a network with free/cheaply sourced hardware. I also am a firm opensource advocate and I implemented a central server with a distribution called
Karoshi server
After implementing Moodle, there was the question of the teachers to have more interactive options in the LO's. I went searching and bumped into Xerte online Toolkits.
With one of the teachers I even went to a 1 day course in Hasselt, given by Katrien Bernearts.
This was my start with Xerte online Toolkits, some 6 years ago I think.
As I am very much involved with opensource projects, especially with community management tasks, I try to create an inclusive atmosphere and point new users to experienced users so everybody can grow during their journey of discovering the project.
As always and especially with opensource projects, I see several subprojects. And with most projects they seem to be very similar.
So there are the developers, the documentation and translation team, the ambassadors and (the majority) the users.
A project needs every part of these sub projects. And in a perfect project every part has everything 100% covered.
When I look at the Xerte project, there are probably loads of hidden gems, but the 'official' project documentation seems to be very outdated.
In order to overcome this I would like to know what the status is of reviewing the documentation? What 'hidden' documentation could be available? (I am thinking about documentation created by large institutions like Uni of Nothingham)
What action can be undertaken by the community to get the docs updated and available? Would it be an idea to use a tool like
readthedocs
with edit options on github?
As exampl, this is the readthedocs page for nethserver:
docs.nethserver.org/en/v7/
Readthedocs automatically generates pdf's of the documents. For the NethServer admin guide this is the link to the pdf:
docs.nethserver.org/_/downloads/en/latest/pdf/
What I would like to accomplish is a bigger community involvement in the development of the project.
I would love to hear some ideas and further input.
best regards,
robb