[gnome-web-www] Add blog post for a participant; update language for December 2014 round to past tense; don't use "t
- From: Marina Zhurakhinskaya <marinaz src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [gnome-web-www] Add blog post for a participant; update language for December 2014 round to past tense; don't use "t
- Date: Sat, 14 Mar 2015 00:34:52 +0000 (UTC)
commit 4d87bcc515df9ef288ee2be22c2027ad85277505
Author: Marina Zhurakhinskaya <marinaz redhat com>
Date: Fri Mar 13 20:33:47 2015 -0400
Add blog post for a participant; update language for December 2014 round to past tense; don't use "the"
in from of Software Freedom Conservancy
theme/opw/index.html | 10 +++++-----
theme/outreachy/index.html | 2 +-
2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/theme/opw/index.html b/theme/opw/index.html
index 768a2b8..ef8ea7c 100644
--- a/theme/opw/index.html
+++ b/theme/opw/index.html
@@ -47,11 +47,11 @@
<div class="span24" id="participants">
<h2>Participants</h2>
- <p><strong>44 interns</strong> were accepted for December 2014 - March 2015 round of the
Outreach Program!</p>
+ <p><strong>44 interns</strong> participated in the December 2014 - March 2015 round of the
Outreach Program!</p>
<div class="clearfix"></div>
- <a class="learn-more view-participants">Find out who is participating in this round!</a>
+ <a class="learn-more view-participants">Find out who participated in this round!</a>
<div class="clearfix"></div>
@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@
<li><a href="http://mahatic.com/">Mahati Chamarthy</a></li>
<li><a href="http://smittnelly.blogspot.ru/">Nelly Kuznetsova</a></li>
<li><a href="http://annaphilips.com/">Anna Philips</a></li>
- <li>Alice Rice</li>
+ <li><a href="http://openux.tumblr.com/">Alice Rice</a></li>
<div class="org-name">OpenStreetMap</div>
<li><a href="http://nitika-opw2014.blogspot.com/">Nitika Agarwal</a></li>
@@ -156,7 +156,7 @@
<div class="span24 section" id="sponsors">
<h2>Sponsors</h2>
- <p>The Outreach Program is organized by the GNOME Foundation. The internships in the December
2014 - March 2015 round are generously sponsored by the following organizations and companies:</p>
+ <p>The Outreach Program was organized by the GNOME Foundation. The internships in the December
2014 - March 2015 round were generously sponsored by the following organizations and companies:</p>
<h3>Equalizers</h3>
@@ -232,7 +232,7 @@
<div class="span24 section" id="about">
<h2>About</h2>
- <p>The Outreach Program for Women (OPW) was inspired by Google Summer of Code and by how few
women applied for it. The GNOME Foundation first started OPW with one round in 2006, and then resumed the
effort in 2010 with rounds organized twice a year. In the May 2012 round, the Software Freedom Conservancy
joined OPW with one internship with the Twisted project. In the January 2013 round, many other free and open
source organizations joined the program. For the May 2015 round, the program was renamed to <a
href="http://outreachy.org">Outreachy</a> with the goal of expanding to engage people from various
underrepresented groups and was moved to the Software Freedom Conservancy as its organizational home.</p>
+ <p>The Outreach Program for Women (OPW) was inspired by Google Summer of Code and by how few
women applied for it. The GNOME Foundation first started OPW with one round in 2006, and then resumed the
effort in 2010 with rounds organized twice a year. In the May 2012 round, Software Freedom Conservancy joined
OPW with one internship with the Twisted project. In the January 2013 round, many other free and open source
organizations joined the program. For the May 2015 round, the program was renamed to <a
href="http://outreachy.org">Outreachy</a> with the goal of expanding to engage people from various
underrepresented groups and was moved to Software Freedom Conservancy as its organizational home.</p>
<p>This program has been a welcoming link that connects <strong>talented and passionate
newcomers</strong> with people working in free and open source software and guides them through their first
contribution. Through the outreach program, participants learn how exciting and valuable work on software
freedom can be, while helping us to build a more inclusive community.</p>
diff --git a/theme/outreachy/index.html b/theme/outreachy/index.html
index 79b8015..2616402 100644
--- a/theme/outreachy/index.html
+++ b/theme/outreachy/index.html
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ full-time internships will run from May 25 to August 25. Coding, design, documen
<div class="span24 section" id="about">
<h2>About</h2>
- <p>Outreachy is the successor of the Outreach Program for Women (OPW). OPW was inspired by
Google Summer of Code and by how few women applied for it. The GNOME Foundation first started OPW with one
round in 2006, and then resumed the effort in 2010 with rounds organized twice a year. In the May 2012 round,
the Software Freedom Conservancy joined OPW with one internship with the Twisted project. In the January 2013
round, many other free and open source organizations joined the program. For the May 2015 round, the program
was renamed to Outreachy with the goal of expanding to engage people from various underrepresented groups and
was moved to the Software Freedom Conservancy as its organizational home.</p>
+ <p>Outreachy is the successor of the Outreach Program for Women (OPW). OPW was inspired by
Google Summer of Code and by how few women applied for it. The GNOME Foundation first started OPW with one
round in 2006, and then resumed the effort in 2010 with rounds organized twice a year. In the May 2012 round,
Software Freedom Conservancy joined OPW with one internship with the Twisted project. In the January 2013
round, many other free and open source organizations joined the program. For the May 2015 round, the program
was renamed to Outreachy with the goal of expanding to engage people from various underrepresented groups and
was moved to Software Freedom Conservancy as its organizational home.</p>
<p>This program is a welcoming link that connects <strong>talented and passionate
newcomers</strong> with people working in free and open source software and guides them through their first
contribution. Through Outreachy, participants learn how exciting and valuable work on software freedom can
be, while helping us to build a more inclusive community. </p>
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