From meganem at stanford.edu Fri Aug 8 13:08:23 2014 From: meganem at stanford.edu (Megan Erin Miller) Date: Fri, 8 Aug 2014 13:08:23 -0700 Subject: [opensource] Last month on the SWS Blog: Flavors of Agile, Cherry Picking Git, Bulk importing redirects, Stanford Sites Updates Message-ID: Happy Friday! Last month on the SWS Blog: - *Agile Project Management and its flavors: where does Scrum end and Kanban begin?* (7/30/14) ? Linnea dives into the variations of agile and helps define some terms. - *Using Display Suite to provide field-level permissions* (7/28/14) ? Caryl shows you how to display different amounts of content to anonymous and authenticated users. - *Cherry Picking - Small Git Lesson* (7/22/14) ? Shea explains why small commits allow for big wins using the cherry-pick command. - *Stanford Sites Updates, July 2014* (7/21/14) ? John outlines the significant changes rolled out to the Stanford Sites service in July. - *Module of the Day: Path Redirect Import* (7/14/14) ? John gives a tour of the Path Redirect Import module, which lets you import redirects in bulk to your Drupal site. - *The SWS team is growing!* (7/9/14) ? Sara shares her thoughts on choosing to work at Stanford in Drupal, and talks about our two brand new positions. - *Writing for the Web #6: Freeing your content from HTML tables used for layout* (7/9/14) ? Linnea talks about the appropriate and not appropriate ways to use HTML tables on your website. - *Getting Started on Sites: How to Add a Google Map to your Website - Updated* (7/7/14) ? Cynthia shares updated instructions on how to embed a Google Map to your website. The Stanford Web Services Blog features tutorials, articles, and case studies from the SWS team, and provides an avenue of communication for SWS activities, a forum for discussion around trends and technologies, and a resource to the community. We welcome you to subscribe to the blog here , or keep an eye out for our monthly digest via email. * * * * * * * * Stanford Web Services ? http://webservices.stanford.edu Read more about Stanford Sites: http://sites.stanford.edu Contact us through HelpSU: http://stanford.io/XkTdwt Find us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SUWebServices Read our blog: http://swsblog.stanford.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From davies at stanford.edu Wed Aug 13 17:21:12 2014 From: davies at stanford.edu (Todd Davies) Date: Wed, 13 Aug 2014 17:21:12 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [opensource] Do you know anything about the Academy of Science and Engineering (ASE)? Message-ID: Hi, all, I am interested in possibly submitting a paper with students to an upcoming conference sponsored by the Academy of Science and Engineering (ASE), which seems to be a relatively new entity headquartered in north carolina (http://www.scienceengineeringacademy.org/asesite/). ASE is a bit mysterious, and I have found virtually no third party content about it on the Web - it has no Wikipedia entry that I can find. They have apparently taken over a few IEEE conferences like SocialCom and PASSAT, so that IEEE is no longer sponsoring those conferences. ASE has its own digital library, which says it is an open library (http://www.ase360.org/), and they seem to be aiming for academic venues for their latest conferences and are keeping reg fees lower than ACM and IEEE. They list impressive orgs as sponsors, like NSF and NIH. But there is no indication of who the people are who actually run ASE, that I have been able to find. ASE held some recent conferences at Stanford (e.g. http://www.scienceengineering.org/ase/conference/2014/socialcom/sanjose/website/). Do any of you know about ASE? Is it a stable organization? Is their digital library likely to have staying power? Todd Todd Davies *** email: davies at stanford.edu Symbolic Systems Program *** phone: 1-650-723-4091 Stanford University *** fax: 1-650-723-5666 Stanford, CA, 94305-2150 *** web: www.stanford.edu/~davies USA *** office: 460-040C From kareej at stanford.edu Tue Aug 26 09:51:53 2014 From: kareej at stanford.edu (Karee JuVette) Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2014 11:51:53 -0500 Subject: [opensource] subscribe to list Message-ID: could i be subscribed to this list? thanks. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cryschen at stanford.edu Tue Aug 26 12:16:31 2014 From: cryschen at stanford.edu (Crystal Chen) Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2014 12:16:31 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [opensource] Git/Github Workshop In-Reply-To: <945913288.2154649.1409080282203.JavaMail.zimbra@stanford.edu> Message-ID: <950380307.2162783.1409080591521.JavaMail.zimbra@stanford.edu> Hello, John Britton of Github has kindly offered to host a git/github workshop here at Stanford next month. If you are interested in attending, do reply to this email and let me know: 1) What topics would you like John to cover? 2) How much time would you be able to take from your day to attend? He can do a workshop from 1.5 hours to 4 hours. 3) Would you prefer to do the workshop in a computer lab or do you have your own laptops you can bring? Do forward this email along to colleagues you know who may be interested in utilizing Git/Github. Cheers, Crystal Chen cryschen at stanford.edu Web Developer, OHNS From slester at stanford.edu Wed Aug 27 09:06:24 2014 From: slester at stanford.edu (Sarah Lester) Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2014 09:06:24 -0700 Subject: [opensource] Git/Github Workshop In-Reply-To: <950380307.2162783.1409080591521.JavaMail.zimbra@stanford.edu> References: <950380307.2162783.1409080591521.JavaMail.zimbra@stanford.edu> Message-ID: <49F3DD6B-A534-47E9-8B9C-06E938FE29BB@stanford.edu> Hi Crystal, I would be interested in attending. I have a pretty limited amount of experience with Git/Github so really any topic would be interesting to me. I could do up to 4 hours depending on the day. The week of Sept 14th is new student orientation, which is crazy. I can bring my own laptop. Thanks much for sending out this offer. Best, Sarah Sarah Lester Engineering Librarian Terman Engineering Library Huang Engineering Center, Rm 201 475 Via Ortega, MC-4029 Stanford, CA 94305-4121 On Aug 26, 2014, at 12:16 PM, Crystal Chen wrote: > Hello, > > John Britton of Github has kindly offered to host a git/github workshop here at Stanford next month. > > If you are interested in attending, do reply to this email and let me know: > > 1) What topics would you like John to cover? > 2) How much time would you be able to take from your day to attend? He can do a workshop from 1.5 hours to 4 hours. > 3) Would you prefer to do the workshop in a computer lab or do you have your own laptops you can bring? > > Do forward this email along to colleagues you know who may be interested in utilizing Git/Github. > > Cheers, > Crystal Chen > cryschen at stanford.edu > Web Developer, OHNS > > _______________________________________________ > opensource mailing list > opensource at lists.stanford.edu > https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/opensource >