* List myself as co-ordinating the "Rewrite the Handbook" section
* Fixed a bunch of markup 'errors'
* Add a "Search engine enhancement" request from docs/10088
* Put ">" after most of the e-mail addresses, to match the opening
"<" that they have.
Some of it is from
PR: docs/10088
Submitted by: Bob Flavin <ribo@watson.ibm.com>
every internal FreeBSD machine.
(b.) Removal of references to kickme.FreeBSD.org as an available
non-developer machine. This was replaced with a vague reference
to an as-need basis.
Submitted by: msmith (a.)
has the following format:
<month-and-year>
o <organization-name> <date-of-article> <BR>
<name-of-article> <BR>
by <author-name> <BR>
<additional-description>
o ...
The press page is presently coded as an HTML document, so the
following discussion will use html terminology.
<month-and-year> is a <h2> section element, with a <ul>
list as its child. Each list item is enclosed in a pair of <p>,</p>
tags and consequently appears as one paragraph to a browser.
<organization-name> will be a link to the primary web site of the
organization in the news item.
<date-of-article> is presented as: (nn)? <month-name> <year>.
Here <month-name> is the full name of the month. <year> is a 4
digit year. The (nn?) is the numeric day of the month, if available.
The <organization> and <date-of-article> items are rendered
as `bold' on suitably capable browsers.
<name-of-article> is the title of the article and is a link to
the actual article on the WWW.
<author-name> names the author of the article, or, in the case
of company press releases, states that it is a press release.
<additional-description> consists of a few lines (one paragraph)
summarizing the article so that readers do not need to download the
article in question to decide if it is interesting.
Entries in a month with a date are sorted most recent first.
Articles without a specific date appear before articles with
known date. This order is arbitrary and has been used for
consistency of presentation.
Other non-visible changes to the HTML:
o HTML tags now uniformly lowercase
o a couple of sgml errors corrected
The web page now passes the `tidy' test.
/usr/lib/compat. The compat20/compat21 distributions are a.out libraries,
thus they should live in /usr/lib/compat/aout to match "ldconfig_paths_aout".
user groups in four out of seven states of Australia, so I moved all the Oz
entries under an "Australia" entry which, according to alphabetical order,
is at the top of the page. Yay - where we belong!