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[nycphp-talk] Publishing on the New York PHP website

Joseph Crawford codebowl at gmail.com
Sun Sep 26 10:33:39 EDT 2004


Tim,

thanks for the information, i will read up on that page now ;)

Joe Crawford


On Sun, 26 Sep 2004 10:03:07 -0400, Tim Gales <tgales at tgaconnect.com> wrote:
> 
> Joseph Crawford writes:
> 
> > Daniel [Convissor], if you can get it posted on the NYPHP site i can
> > create a walkthrough for getting this setup not as difficult
> > as i thought it was going to be ;)
> 
> If anyone has some information, which they feel will
> be of general interest or help to the PHP community,
> and they feel it should be published (and here I
> mean in addition to being published in the
> mail list archives), New York PHP has some
> established procedures for accomplishing this.
> 
> If the information covers so much ground
> that it would require a whole new section
> on the website, then it would be a project.
> 
> You should then follow the guidelines for
> submitting a project at:
>  http://www.nyphp.org/content/presentations/nyphp/index.php?slide=10
> 
> If the information is more along the lines of
> a best practice for coding or otherwise using
> PHP (e.g. how to best set PHP ini directives),
> it is more likely to be a candidate for a
> PHundamental article.
> (see: http://education.nyphp.org/phundamentals/ )
> 
> Article ideas, which are candidates for a 'PHundamental',
> can be submitted to Jeff Siegel (jeff.siegel at nyphp.org)
> or Michael Southwell (michael.southwell at nyphp.org).
> 
> Other information, which serves as a useful
> 'backgrounder', would probably be best published
> as an AMPere.
> (see: http://education.nyphp.org/ampeers/ )
> 
> You can get in touch with Jasper Lin (jasper.lin at nyphp.org),
> who is the AMPeers Project Manager.
> 
> Actually all these ways to get something published
> are described on the website -- but I thought it
> might be handy to summarize them here.
> 
> One more important thing about contributing to
> New York PHP is that you don't have to be a
> 'ninja master' or a '6th degree black belt' in PHP
> to be able to contribute.
> 
> I wish this fact were more widely known among associate
> members -- I sometimes get the feeling that many
> people are reluctant to offer to help, because
> they feel they haven't yet mastered PHP.
> 
> This is too bad because the fastest way to
> learn something is to work with other people
> who can give you a few 'pointers' -- not slug
> it out by yourself.
> 
> T. Gales & Associates
> 'Helping People Connect with Technology'
> 
> http://www.tgaconnect.com
> 
> _______________________________________________
> New York PHP Talk
> Supporting AMP Technology (Apache/MySQL/PHP)
> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
> http://www.newyorkphp.org
> 



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Joseph Crawford Jr.
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