/aws-week-in-review

The files in this GitHub Repo are used to produce the AWS Week in Review.

Primary LanguageHTML

The files in this GitHub Repo are used to produce the AWS Week in Review.

Contributing is easy; you can simply create a GitHub account and make edits to the current week-in-review- file from the comfort of your web browser. Read this post for step-by-step directions.

History

In the early days of AWS, Jeff Barr wrote the Week in Review each week. Initially this took just 5 or 10 minutes, but as the pace of innovation quickened and the size of the AWS community grew, Jeff sometimes spent 4 or 5 hours finding and formatting the content.

The new model, introduced in August of 2016, is crowdsourced. AWS fans, users, bloggers, and partners are all invited to contribute to the project and to the AWS Week in Review.

Content & Style Guidelines

Here are the guidelines for making contributions:

  • Relevance - All contributions must be directly related to AWS.
  • Ownership - All contributions remain the property of the contributor.
  • Validity - All links must be to publicly available content (links to free, gated content are fine).
  • Timeliness - All contributions must refer to content that was created on the associated date.
  • Neutrality - This is not the place for editorializing. Just the facts / links.

Here are the guidelines for style:

  • Content from the AWS Blog is generally prefixed with "I wrote about POST_TITLE" or "We announced that TOPIC."
  • Content from other AWS blogs is styled as "The BLOG_NAME wrote about POST_TITLE."
  • Content from individuals is styled as "PERSON wrote about POST_TITLE."
  • Content from partners and ISVs is styled as "The BLOG_NAME wrote about POST_TITLE."

There's room for some innovation and variation to keep things interesting, but keep it clean and concise.

Week in Review Sections

Each Week in Review contains the following sections:

  • Daily Summaries - content from the main AWS Blog, other AWS blogs, and everywhere else.
  • New & Notable Open Source.
  • New SlideShare Presentations.
  • New YouTube Videos including APN Success Stories.
  • New AWS Marketplace products.
  • New Customer Success Stories.
  • Upcoming Events.
  • Help Wanted.

The OPML file (feeds.opml) in this repo contains a list of sources. Feel free to use it to find content, and add your own sources as well.

Short Codes

Please use the folllowing "short codes" when you refer to content in other AWS blogs:

  • [iotblog] - The Internet of Things on AWS Blog.
  • [devblog] - AWS Developer Blog.
  • [gamedevblog] - Amazon GameDev Blog.
  • [cliblog] - AWS Command Line Tool Blog.
  • [govblog] - AWS Government, Education, & Nonprofits Blog.
  • [javascriptblog] - AWS JavaScript Blog.
  • [phpblog] - PHP Developer Blog.
  • [rubyblog] - AWS Ruby Development Blog.
  • [secblog] - AWS Security Blog.
  • [startupblog] - AWS Startup Collection.
  • [entblog] - Enterprise Blog.
  • [javablog] - AWS Java Blog.
  • [mobileblog] - AWS Mobile Development Blog.
  • [netblog] - AWS Windows and .NET Developer Blog.
  • [appmgmtblog] - AWS DevOps Blog.
  • [archblog] - AWS Architecture Blog.
  • [bigdatablog] - AWS Big Data Blog.
  • [computeblog] - AWS Compute Blog.
  • [sesblog] - Amazon Simple Email Service Blog.
  • [apnblog] - AWS Partner Network Blog.

For example, an entry might look like "The [iotblog] talked about ...."

Also, please feel free to invent similar codes for the non-AWS blogs. Put them in the file shortcodes.txt.

Contributing

You can contribute to this project (and to the AWS Week in Review) by cloning the repo, adding content to the current week-in-review- file, and then submitting a pull request. Over time, there may be other avenues, such as issues.

Every Monday morning, Jeff will review and accept pull requests until 10 AM PT and endeavor to produce a new Week in Review shortly thereafter.

Please feel free to suggest improvements to the process and to the use of GitHub as well.