Hello, Digital Creations is pleased to announce the pubic availability of the new Zope.org site. This site is currently in *beta*; it mostly works, but it not yet complete. Eventually it will replace the current Zope.org site. http://www.zope.org:18200/ * What's new about this site? The new site is focused on providing a framework for the Zope community to develop on-line Zope resources. Using Zope itself community members can experiment and create their own resources on Zope.org, much as Python hackers create their own content on the Python starship site. To participate, you can create a membership for yourself which provides you with an area to create objects, and the ability to personalize the site. The new Zope.org site is running Zope 2 and makes heavy use of the Portal Toolkit, the Catalog and ZClasses. * What's Membership all about? Membership allows you to create an account on Zope.org. Then you can build and manage your own Zope objects. You can upload your contributed software, and author your own documents on-line. If you can't install Zope locally this is a great way to try it out. If you are a Zope guru an account allows you to share you information efficiently with the Zope community. Everything you create can be woven into the fabric of the site through the magic of the catalog. For example, many pages are built from Catalog searches of member objects. Membership also allows you to find out about what's happened on the site since you last visited. For example you can search for all How-To objects that have changed since you were last at the site. * Is the site useful if you don't want to be a Member? Yes. The main feature of the new site for non-members is searchability and access to member content. Wondering about DTML syntax, just type 'getitem' into the search form and find the right pages of the DTML Guide, and any relevant user contributed How-Tos. * Why is the site considered 'beta'? Because Zope 2 itself is still in beta, and because we have not moved enough content to the new site. There may even be a bug or two left ;-) * What should I do if I find something broken, or have suggestions? Send them to info@digicool.com. Please realize that this site is not yet complete. We have lots of plans for it, and would like to hear your ideas too. Give the new site a whirl and have fun! -Amos P.S. In keeping with a great tradition, I'm going on vacation tomorrow, so I cannot guarantee that your problems and suggestions for the site will be acted upon immediately. Thanks for your understanding. -- Amos Latteier mailto:amos@digicool.com Digital Creations http://www.digicool.com
Hello,
Digital Creations is pleased to announce the pubic availability of the new Zope.org site. This site is currently in *beta*; it mostly works, but it not yet complete. Eventually it will replace the current Zope.org site.
Phew! awesome....now to start on some HowTo's... tone.
So this is what you guys have been waiting to unleash on us/us on?-) Cool. Is it going to be possible to peek at everyone else's home pages? I remember the fastest way I got up to speed on UNIX was to browse everyone else's (including the experts') .shrc, .cshrc, and .emacs files. This public area seems very appealing in general but even more so if I can scrounge up examples that other people use, and find people whose grasp of Zope is my level or greater (so that I know whom to ask my nutty questions :-). Just a thought in case it can become some part of the plan. Learning by example has got to be one of the best ways to learn, and the public mini-sites could provide that learning resource if people didn't mind (perhaps it could be a personal option to browse dtml-methods, properties, etc.? Looks great. I think this'll help the community a great deal with info sharing. Cheers, = Joe "occam" Grace = Amos Latteier wrote:
The new site is focused on providing a framework for the Zope community to develop on-line Zope resources. Using Zope itself community members can experiment and create their own resources on Zope.org,
At 07:33 18/08/99 , Joe Grace wrote:
So this is what you guys have been waiting to unleash on us/us on?-) Cool.
Is it going to be possible to peek at everyone else's home pages? I remember the fastest way I got up to speed on UNIX was to browse everyone else's (including the experts') .shrc, .cshrc, and .emacs files. This public area seems very appealing in general but even more so if I can scrounge up examples that other people use, and find people whose grasp of Zope is my level or greater (so that I know whom to ask my nutty questions :-).
Just a thought in case it can become some part of the plan. Learning by example has got to be one of the best ways to learn, and the public mini-sites could provide that learning resource if people didn't mind (perhaps it could be a personal option to browse dtml-methods, properties, etc.?
Every page has a 'DTML source' link at the bottom of the page, giving you instant access to the answer to the 'hows he dunnit' question. -- Martijn Pieters, Web Developer | Antraciet http://www.antraciet.nl | Tel: +31-35-7502100 Fax: +31-35-7502111 | mailto:mj@antraciet.nl http://www.antraciet.nl/~mj | PGP: http://wwwkeys.nl.pgp.net:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xA8A32149 ------------------------------------------
participants (4)
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Amos Latteier -
Joe Grace -
Martijn Pieters -
Tony.McDonald@newcastle.ac.uk