From luislavena at gmail.com Mon May 18 23:45:44 2009 From: luislavena at gmail.com (Luis Lavena) Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 00:45:44 -0300 Subject: [Rubyinstaller-users] One-Click Ruby Installer needs a new home, can you help him? Message-ID: <71166b3b0905182045n3e1007a2m407ce12baa28299@mail.gmail.com> Original posted on my blog: http://blog.mmediasys.com/2009/05/19/rubyinstaller-one-clicks-need-a-new-home-can-you-help-him/ === I must say that my skills to ask for something are really lacking, and my design skills are even worse. So, I?m bringing this topic to the table, seeking for ideas on how to improve the Ruby on Windows image beyond just code. I?m willing to offer money to pay for it, since I?m quite aware that Open Source and contributions don?t put food on the table. Of course, I?m not rich, so the balance needs to be found :D So, what is the idea: * Build the website with Radiant or a simple CMS over Ruby * Design needs to be simple and provide access to: 1. News feed (small articles) 2. Download info and links 3. Getting Started Resources (info and links) 4. Contribute (RubyForge and GitHub info) 5. Support (access to mailing list and forums of interest) * Initial artwork (logo and iso) already exist * Application icons can be highly improved :D For the record: there is no need to be a Windows user or designer, so people on Linux and OSX are welcome ;) If there is more interest, maybe a Bounty can be opened, but time, feedback and community response will tell. Please, comment and pass the message! -- Luis Lavena AREA 17 - Perfection in design is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but rather when there is nothing more to take away. Antoine de Saint-Exup?ry From luislavena at gmail.com Tue May 19 08:54:45 2009 From: luislavena at gmail.com (Luis Lavena) Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 09:54:45 -0300 Subject: [Rubyinstaller-users] [Rubyinstaller-devel] One-Click Ruby Installer needs a new home, can you help him? In-Reply-To: References: <71166b3b0905182045n3e1007a2m407ce12baa28299@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <71166b3b0905190554m2558d7f2wda2366576b5450b1@mail.gmail.com> On Tue, May 19, 2009 at 4:32 AM, Michal Suchanek wrote: > 2009/5/19 Luis Lavena : >> Original posted on my blog: >> >> http://blog.mmediasys.com/2009/05/19/rubyinstaller-one-clicks-need-a-new-home-can-you-help-him/ >> >> === >> >> I must say that my skills to ask for something are really lacking, and > > Indeed, it's not clear what you are asking ;-) > Thank you, thank you, I do my best. >> my design skills are even worse. >> >> So, I?m bringing this topic to the table, seeking for ideas on how to >> improve the Ruby on Windows image beyond just code. >> >> I?m willing to offer money to pay for it, since I?m quite aware that >> Open Source and contributions don?t put food on the table. >> >> Of course, I?m not rich, so the balance needs to be found :D >> >> So, what is the idea: >> >> ? ?* Build the website with Radiant or a simple CMS over Ruby > > Building a web site is one thing but running it is another. I'm going to take care of the hosting. > Do you already have some hosting, or are you seeking a complete solution? Well, again hosting is going to be out of my pocket too, so if a generous company thinks that One-Click Ruby Installer deserves a homepage and they could host it, will be awesome, but I'm not holding my breath. > If you do have one what are the features it provides, or what do you > expect from the new one? > Well, the Wiki is unattractive, and hard to maintain. Doing gardering on the wiki takes longer, even with the help of some contributors in the past. The website idea is offer, clean and simple a door to Ruby on Windows resources, which is often hard to find, mostly due lack of integration or growth on ruby-lang to hold this different things. >> ? ?* Design needs to be simple and provide access to: >> ? ? ? ? 1. News feed (small articles) >> ? ? ? ? 2. Download info and links >> ? ? ? ? 3. Getting Started Resources (info and links) >> ? ? ? ? 4. Contribute (RubyForge and GitHub info) >> ? ? ? ? 5. Support (access to mailing list and forums of interest) > > Here it seems that aside the news articles everything else is hosted > off the website, and only interface for picking articles on these > topics is needed. > Like a Wiki :-) >> ? ?* Initial artwork (logo and iso) already exist >> ? ?* Application icons can be highly improved :D > > This is not related to the web site, is it? > Well, the logo is, the favicon is :-) > > Thanks > Thanks to you! Cheers, -- Luis Lavena AREA 17 - Perfection in design is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but rather when there is nothing more to take away. Antoine de Saint-Exup?ry From luislavena at gmail.com Tue May 19 19:16:10 2009 From: luislavena at gmail.com (Luis Lavena) Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 20:16:10 -0300 Subject: [Rubyinstaller-users] [Rubyinstaller-devel] One-Click Ruby Installer needs a new home, can you help him? In-Reply-To: References: <71166b3b0905182045n3e1007a2m407ce12baa28299@mail.gmail.com> <71166b3b0905190554m2558d7f2wda2366576b5450b1@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <71166b3b0905191616x18428570ue01cd8b34ceaaf1f@mail.gmail.com> On Tue, May 19, 2009 at 11:24 AM, Michal Suchanek wrote: > 2009/5/19 Luis Lavena : >> ... >> >> Well, again hosting is going to be out of my pocket too, so if a >> generous company thinks that One-Click Ruby Installer deserves a >> homepage and they could host it, will be awesome, but I'm not holding >> my breath. > > I think that hosting a web site (as opposed a download site) is not > completely out of question. > Well, I believe the hosting part of the equation is not a problem. Downloads are going to be located as usual at RubyForge. The intention of this is not replace RubyForge for bug reporting or downloads, but provide a better, simplified and clean access to Ruby for Windows, which ruby-lang is not offering and neither RubyForge or the current Wiki page. > However, it is necessary to know what kind of hosting is required. > I mention the development of the site in Radiant CMS or a Ruby CMS, so the hosting is going to be Ruby/Rails based. > Still if you hosted the site yourself it would be sort of reassuring > to know that as long as the the installer is going forward the site is > likely to stay, too. > Well, that's what I said, I intend to host myself. Also, I intend to contribute with my personal money for the design of it. >> >> Like a Wiki :-) > > No, unlike a Wiki. > Well, I tried to be ironic, but I meant to say more as Knowledge Base containing links to the different resources in the different categories: from compiling to using Ruby in different scenarios (either on Windows or deploys from it to Linux). > ... > > I imagine it is possible to turn commit messages and release notes for > downloads into news articles automatically if they are hosted on a > reasonably cooperative site. > Manual administration is not going to be a problem, being the central location of all this will make things more easy. > A script could easily select the newest article from each important > category to create a clean and simple top page that offers all > important information in one place. > Which basically Radiant can do it with some Ruby magic. > > Perhaps I got too distracted by the application icon :-) > Sorry :-) So, in better words I think I going to run this as a Bounty/Contest/Challenge: I'm going to open a Pledgie, and put some money there. This means the designers that want to participate will need to be able to collect money using Paypal. Next, Designers can create mockups of the homepage, and use "as inspiration" the logo/branding for the installer that already exist: http://blog.mmediasys.com/2008/03/29/progress-of-one-click-installer-rubyinstaller/ Important things the site needs to allow: * Simple, clean, friendly design. * Latest news about releases. * Latest version information * Latest Links added to the Knowledge Base * Access to Download information pages * Access to Knowledge Base pages * Access to Get Help pages * Access to Contribute information pages Advance details: * Download information will contain both 1.8 and 1.9 latest downloads. * Prior download can be accessed via RubyForge * Knowledge Base pages are small descriptions and links to the source of the information, either a blog, a wiki or a screencast being hosted elsewhere. * Get Help pages are going to summarize mailing list or groups where users will likely get more feedback about their issues running Ruby on Windows. * Contribute will provide links and information to access RubyForge or GitHub and what are the requirements to help on the project. Mockups are going to be open to the wild as a poll, and people will pick them. Pledgie will remain active until deadline of the poll. Once the poll deadline has reached, the best mockup which follows the above criteria is going to be selected as "winner", which leads us to the next point: Before any designer do the mock up, they need to consider: * Once design is approved, both hompages and inner page needs to be completed as valid HTML+CSS * Cross browser (yeah, IE, I'm talking about that beast) needs to be considered as supported. * Designer could have experience integrating this with Radiant and provide advice, but is not mandatory. * Full pledgie money is going to be paid when HTML and CSS elements are handed over to RubyInstaller project team, in public, using a Git repository. * Credits and copyright of the design will remains in the design owner, but he must give authorization for usage in rubyinstaller.org. I want this be the most clean, clear and public as possible. I want community choose what community likes, not what my personal taste dictates. All the money collected up to the date of the poll is going to be transfered, so is a risk, could be 100 or could be 2K, community will decide. Sounds good? I'm going to take this copy and use for the pledgie ;-) Cheers, -- Luis Lavena AREA 17 - Perfection in design is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but rather when there is nothing more to take away. Antoine de Saint-Exup?ry