WTD Episode 10: What's going on in our lives as documentarians and product owners
In this episode, we talk about what's going on in our lives as
documentarians and product owners. Chris talks about challenges in
collaborating with reviewers in efficient ways. Google Docs works
great for gathering comments, but it isn't so good for stor
1 Stunde 1 Minute
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A discussion podcast based on WTD topics and issues, focused on technical writing and documentation for software products.
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vor 8 Jahren
In this episode, we talk about what's going on in our lives as
documentarians and product owners. Chris talks about challenges in
collaborating with reviewers in efficient ways. Google Docs works
great for gathering comments, but it isn't so good for storing
source code in a manageable format. Also, it seems that every
company/client has their own preferred toolchain around reviews,
and it's hard to know the best approach to take. Jared talks about
the ebbs and flows of managing products in the gambling space, and
the challenges around benchmarking, performance testing, and uptime
demands for the products he manages, especially during the
Melbourne Cup. Tom is excited about the docs-as-code milestone
reached at his work, where his team can now build and deploy Jekyll
directly from the server through commits to an internal git repo.
This publishing efficiency allowed their team to get rid of an old,
archaic CMS publishing process that was slowing writers down.
documentarians and product owners. Chris talks about challenges in
collaborating with reviewers in efficient ways. Google Docs works
great for gathering comments, but it isn't so good for storing
source code in a manageable format. Also, it seems that every
company/client has their own preferred toolchain around reviews,
and it's hard to know the best approach to take. Jared talks about
the ebbs and flows of managing products in the gambling space, and
the challenges around benchmarking, performance testing, and uptime
demands for the products he manages, especially during the
Melbourne Cup. Tom is excited about the docs-as-code milestone
reached at his work, where his team can now build and deploy Jekyll
directly from the server through commits to an internal git repo.
This publishing efficiency allowed their team to get rid of an old,
archaic CMS publishing process that was slowing writers down.
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