Docs for tech writers

Hi everyone,
I'm working with a team on a short guide to LibreOffice for technical writers as a class project. We've got a doc plan we'd like to submit to the group for comments and review, but I'm not sure what the best way to do that is. Is there somewhere I could post the doc plan that everyone can get to?

Thanks,
Daniel Friedman

In what form is the doc plan? ODT? Plain text?

If it's in plain text, then I suggest the LibreOffice wiki. You'll need
to create an account.
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation

If it's in ODT, you could put it on either the OOoAuthors website or the
Documentation section of the LibreOffice wiki. Either one requires
someone to get an account before they can upload files (and in the case
of OOoAuthors, you need to request "author" privileges), but downloading
can be done without an account. Or you can put it anywhere else that
people can get to without an account and post a link here. Or you can
send it to me offlist (at my gmail account) and I'll put it on either
site you prefer.

http://www.oooauthors.org/english/libreoffice3
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation

Too many choices?

--Jean

Ok Jean, I posted it to:
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/File:LibreOffice-TechWriterDocPlan.odt

Feel free to comment, everyone.

-Daniel

I Daniel,

The text says:

"It is based on the OpenOffice.org applications developed and maintained by
Sun Microsystems."

Oracle bought Sun Microsystem, so, I think this should say:

"It is based on the OpenOffice.org applications developed and maintained by
Oracle Corporation."

... sadly, because I would have preferred that Oracle participates in the
TDF.

Or something like:

"It is based on the OpenOffice.org applications initially developed and
maintained by Sun Microsystems, now part of the Oracle Corporation."

Congratulations on your initiative.

Cheers

The wikipedia article about OOo states this:

"The OpenOffice.org project is primarily sponsored by Oracle
Corporation (having acquired Sun Microsystems). Other major corporate
contributors include Novell, Red Hat, IBM, Google and others."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenOffice.org

It should say something that OpenOffice is a community driven project
sponsored by Oracle as well as other corporate contributors.

this should be a very informative and helpful document and as current
a technical writer I look forward to seeing what it has to offer.

thanks.