DHQ mailing lists
dhq-production mailing list
dhq-production supports an ongoing discussion among the active editors and implementors of DHQ, focused on issues of production and general strategy. This list is not for the general public. The list is managed and moderated by the general editors.
See the list info page for the production mailing list at
http://lists.digitalhumanities.org/mailman/listinfo/dhq-production.
dhq-editors mailing list
dhq-editors supports an ongoing discussion among the content editors of DHQ, focused on recruiting, developing, and editing the content of the journal. This list is not for the general public.
dhq-international mailing list
dhq-international supports an ongoing discussion among the internationalization group, led by the Internationalization editor, and focused on issues pertaining to multilinguality and its implementation in the journal. Participation from interested members of the public is welcome at the discretion of the
I18N? editor.
dhq-tech mailing list
dhq-tech is the site of ongoing technical discussions related to the operation and maintenance of the DHQ infrastructure (presently an XML publishing infrastructure). In theory, because DHQ is being operated as an open source project, anyone who wishes to contribute should be able to participate not only in technical initiatives (see the
SkunkWorks) related to or in support of DHQ, but also in ongoing discussion and planning related to its operation and development.
dhq-tech is not where decisions are made about the DHQ technical infrastructure, which is the independent responsibility of the Technical Editor in consultation with the General Editors and advisors. It is more like a "dutch oven", where opportunities for innovative and useful technical solutions can be thought up, tried out and developed. From time to time, a project or tool developed on or with dhq-tech may find its way into the DHQ processing core, but that is by no means a given. On the contrary, XML lends itself to the possibility that the most useful and widespread tools will be ones that will
not be used in the core.
Sign up for
dhq-tech at
http://lists.digitalhumanities.org/mailman/listinfo/dhq-tech.
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JuliaFlanders - 13 Oct 2007