Guided tour, spoken documentation
benjamin@winchesterpc.com
benjamin at winchesterpc.com
Sun Aug 14 15:00:03 CEST 2005
Hello, good to meet you.
I looked at your work, and it's quite good. I would like to work with you
and help however I can. (I, too, think it would be good if you delegate
work to others and set up a firm release schedule.)
I was thinking of making a guided tour for people who are new to Linux
and/or KDE and are novices to computing. (And it would be really cool if
the voice my customers heard were mine, hah!) I'd like to make a tour of
KDE, since it's quickly becoming the standard high-end Linux desktop, and
KDE is definitely moving in the right direction. I'd also like to make
somewhat of a guide through the inside of Linux, but that will probably be
later.
>
> Hi
>
> I am working on getting multimedia presentations working on many levels
> for
> KDE. This is no easy task and I can spare little time for it at the
> moment,
> but it sure is near top on my KDE ToDo.
>
> Some of the basics can be seen at http://features.physos.net, which was a
> 3.4
> feature guide I started and could not finish for private reasons. I plan
> to
> do the same for 3.5 and then tackle a Guided Tour and the tools needed.
>
> I would appreciate your help at one point, since I have a heavy non-native
> (but not really German, even worse) accent, I think ;)
>
>
> Rainer
>
>
>
> On Friday 12 August 2005 00:21, Benjamin Vander Jagt wrote:
>> Hello list!
>>
>> My company sells plenty of Linux systems, and one of the most requested
>> items is a tour, walkthough, getting started guide, or something of the
>> sort. Since we usually install SuSE Linux, they have somewhat of a
>> guided
>> tour, but recently Linspire (ugh) introduced a spoken system.
>>
>> Has anyone already started making any spoken systems? My speech is
>> mostly
>> inspired by the accent of Michigan, and I have good inflection and tone,
>> so
>> it should be easily understood by most people.
>>
>> Thanks!
>
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