Hi Everyone,
When we started work on ROS, like most young open source projects, our
greatest need was to recruit early adopters and fellow developers. So we
targeted that audience: we built a wiki, filled it with documentation,
tutorials, and code examples, and made the wiki the landing page at
www.ros.org.
Well, times have changed. Now, six years into the project, we have a
broader audience to consider. We want to reach teachers who are considering
using ROS in their classrooms, managers who want to use ROS in a new
product, journalists who are writing stories about ROS, and many, many
others.
So, in celebration (just a bit late) of ROS's sixth birthday, we're pleased
to present a new
www.ros.org.
After all, a grown-up ROS deserves a grown-up website. Don't worry: the
wiki is still there <
http://wiki.ros.org/>, as are all the other ROS sites
on which we depend.
Btw, like most things we do, the website itself is at
GitHub<
https://github.com/osrf/www.ros.org>.
If you run into a problem or have an idea for improving the site, open an
issue <
https://github.com/osrf/www.ros.org/issues> and we'll have a look.
The ROS team at OSRF