Corporate Document To Be Released As Open Source - Need Comments
Posted: Fri May 19, 2006 3:18 pm
I have recently began work on an online corporate presence for a 29 year old company I work for. I chose CMSMS for the website foundation and as a sideline project I've started work on a (very necessary) step-by-step two-section administration guide.
Section one is for the layman, those persons who will perform the frequent task of uploading photos and files, creating and editing pages of content and overall general upkeep.
Section two is for me (for now), the chief adminsitrator who handles overall domain management, email account creation and the technical aspects of site appearance and function, coupled with backups as necessary.
While the two projects are specifically targeted for the company I work for, I've openly discussed with my employer issues dealing with open source and the GPL. This has not appeared to be any concern whatsoever as they really just want a professional site that is simple to maintain. They actually appeared thrilled that a large group of "volunteers" are working on the CMSMS foundation and modules. To them that is equivalent to cheap labor with the emphasis on cheap.
The gist of this and my primary point is, once I've fulfilled my obligations for the company I work for I'd like to edit the documentation to remove the corporate insignia and references, along with anything pertaining to our personal login and administration security, and release everything else as an open source CMSMS documentation project.
I see a problem though. At present I'm using Microsoft Word 2003 to write the manual/guide. I've investigated both OpenOffice and AbiWord with the OpenDocument format, but I am currently teetering on top of the "which side is the grass greener on" fence.
I've already written about 45 pages and could undergo a pretty simple converstion to an alternative format, but my basic instinct tells me it would be best to base the bulk of the project on a format from the get-go that is as open and universal as possible.
Oh yeah, my friends keep insisting that the document thus far is so detailed and "good" they would prefer I maintain a copyright on it and offer it up as a manuscript for a book down the road. I'm not particularly inclined to veer in that direction though as the open source community has given me a great deal over the years.
What are your thoughts on this?
Section one is for the layman, those persons who will perform the frequent task of uploading photos and files, creating and editing pages of content and overall general upkeep.
Section two is for me (for now), the chief adminsitrator who handles overall domain management, email account creation and the technical aspects of site appearance and function, coupled with backups as necessary.
While the two projects are specifically targeted for the company I work for, I've openly discussed with my employer issues dealing with open source and the GPL. This has not appeared to be any concern whatsoever as they really just want a professional site that is simple to maintain. They actually appeared thrilled that a large group of "volunteers" are working on the CMSMS foundation and modules. To them that is equivalent to cheap labor with the emphasis on cheap.
The gist of this and my primary point is, once I've fulfilled my obligations for the company I work for I'd like to edit the documentation to remove the corporate insignia and references, along with anything pertaining to our personal login and administration security, and release everything else as an open source CMSMS documentation project.
I see a problem though. At present I'm using Microsoft Word 2003 to write the manual/guide. I've investigated both OpenOffice and AbiWord with the OpenDocument format, but I am currently teetering on top of the "which side is the grass greener on" fence.
I've already written about 45 pages and could undergo a pretty simple converstion to an alternative format, but my basic instinct tells me it would be best to base the bulk of the project on a format from the get-go that is as open and universal as possible.
Oh yeah, my friends keep insisting that the document thus far is so detailed and "good" they would prefer I maintain a copyright on it and offer it up as a manuscript for a book down the road. I'm not particularly inclined to veer in that direction though as the open source community has given me a great deal over the years.
What are your thoughts on this?