I changed my website domain (`jwf.io` -> `jwheel.org`) and also updated
my bio to be shorter and more concise. More details are on the Fedora
Wiki or my website.
Signed-off-by: Justin Wheeler <jwheel@redhat.com>
This commit does some behind-the-scenes meta-work to prepare for some
other changes that warrant bigger discussions. However, I phased out the
`FWIKI` and `COMMBLOG` attributes for `url_wiki` and `url_commblog`
respectively. This matches the convention used in other Fedora Docs
repositories.
No changes were made to docs content itself. All information should
display just as it did before this commit.
Signed-off-by: Justin Wheeler <jwheel@redhat.com>
This commit updates my last name throughout the Project and Council docs
pages. I am officially and legally "Wheeler" now and I have already
updated my FAS account information. So this is just making it more
official!
Signed-off-by: Justin W. Wheeler <jwf@redhat.com>
This commit is a significant refactor of all the Fedora Council
documentation into full, native AsciiDoc. This includes following
conventions commonly associated with AsciiDoc, such as the one sentence
per line convention and using more internal `xref` links across pages.
It also introduces explicit link anchors on all headings.
This commit is mostly invisible to the reader. All lines across the
Antora component are now written on one sentence per line, as per the
standard AsciiDoc convention. Following this convention makes future git
diffs easier to read when it comes to actual changes in meaning.
Additionally, where applicable, I updated names and titles of roles that
have since been changed, e.g. "Fedora Community Action & Impact
Coordinator" to "Fedora Community Architect".
Signed-off-by: Justin W. Flory (he/him) <jwf@redhat.com>
This commit changes almost every occurrence of "Council" and "Fedora
Council" with `{team_name}`, an Antora macro that resolves to "Fedora
Council". This continues the integration work with the team profile
introduced in previous commits. It ensures consistent use of the Fedora
Council name in our documents and may also contribute to a slight boost
in search engine optimization.
Signed-off-by: Justin W. Flory (he/him) <jwf@redhat.com>
NOTE: This commit does NOT change content, policy, or the substance of
any written documentation that requires Fedora Council review. This
change only impacts changes related to the Antora toolchain.
This commit integrates the team directory profile that was introduced a
few years ago into the Fedora Council documentation. This makes several
common URLs used across the Fedora Council Antora component accessible
as macros. Instead of hard-coding the same URL across all of the Fedora
Council documentation, the macros can be used to more easily re-use the
same URL consistently across multiple pages.
This commit is one of several that gradually refactors the Fedora
Council documentation to properly fit into an AsciiDoc and Antora
workflow.
Signed-off-by: Justin W. Flory (he/him) <jwf@redhat.com>
This commit fixes the `xref` links used throughout the Fedora Council
documentation to the DEI Team documentation. The Antora component name
changed from `/diversity-inclusion/` to `/dei/`.
Signed-off-by: Justin W. Flory (he/him) <jwf@redhat.com>
This commit fixes the story and original title of the Fedora Community
Architect and its many different historical iterations. This came up in
private message with @mattdm, when he pointed out to me that I missed
some details in how I explained the history of the role title and how we
got to where we are today.
Furthermore, based on the suggestion of @mattdm and other low-vision
users on Fedora Discussion, I dropped the use of punctuated acronyms as
this did not have the desired impact I thought I was making for screen
reader users. So, to respect the feedback of those who participated in
the discussion, I am ending this precedent and will move back to
acronyms not broken with punctuation.
Signed-off-by: Justin W. Flory (he/him) <jwf@redhat.com>
What about FCAIC and FCL?
The title of this role evolved and changed over the years since its
inception in February 2015. When the role was first created, the role
title was Fedora Community Leader (F.C.L.). At the time, the F.C.L. role
provided much needed separation with roles of the Fedora Project Leader.
However, the title did not feel right yet either. Anyone can be a leader
in the Fedora community, whether they are employed by Red Hat or not! We
did not want to imply otherwise.
Later, in October 2016, the role title was changed to Fedora Community
Action & Impact Coordinator (F.C.A.I.C). This title was lengthier but
better captured what community engagement means in a large, globally-
distributed community like Fedora. Over time, community management in
Free & Open Source Software (F.O.S.S.) communities is better recognized
as an important part of successful projects. More projects,
organizations, and companies working on F.O.S.S. introduced new roles in
community management and leadership. However, community work does not
have an industry-accepted job ladder, as is more common with software
engineering. Red Hat eventually settled on the title of community
architect for community work in its pioneering Open Source communities.
Fast forward to 2023. The landscape has changed and evolved! So, it was
the ideal time to reflect on the title for this role. This is a proposal
to change the title to Fedora Community Architect (F.C.A.). Ultimately,
the goal of changing the name is to better describe the role and what
the F.C.A. does in Fedora. The lengthy "F.C.A.I.C." title usually came
with an explanation to others unfamiliar with Fedora and our community
culture. F.C.A. is also a handy shortening of the longer F.C.A.I.C.
acronym too!
Signed-off-by: Justin W. Flory (he/him) <jwf@redhat.com>
2023-01-18 15:56:01 +00:00
Renamed from council/modules/ROOT/pages/fcaic.adoc (Browse further)