svn commit: r46195 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/news/status

Warren Block wblock at FreeBSD.org
Tue Jan 13 01:51:37 UTC 2015


Author: wblock
Date: Tue Jan 13 01:51:36 2015
New Revision: 46195
URL: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/46195

Log:
  Grammer and spalling foxes.

Modified:
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/news/status/report-2014-10-2014-12.xml

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/news/status/report-2014-10-2014-12.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/news/status/report-2014-10-2014-12.xml	Mon Jan 12 23:08:46 2015	(r46194)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/news/status/report-2014-10-2014-12.xml	Tue Jan 13 01:51:36 2015	(r46195)
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@
       2014.</p>
 
     <p>The fourth quarter of 2014 included a number of significant improvements to the &os;
-      system, in particular in compatibility with other systems.  This included
+      system.  In particular, compatibility with other systems was enhanced.  This included
       significant improvements to the Linux compatibility layer, used to
       run Linux binaries on &os;, and the port of WINE, used to run Windows
       applications.  Hypervisor support improved, with &os; gaining the ability
@@ -139,7 +139,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='kern'>
-    <title>Process management</title>
+    <title>Process Management</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -163,9 +163,9 @@
 	management last quarter.</p>
     <!-- This needs some markup from someone with more docbook-fu than me -->
 
-      <p>The Reaper facility, to allow a process to reliably track the
-	running and exiting state of the whole subtree of the processes,
-	was added.  It is intended to improve tools like timeout(1) or
+      <p>The Reaper facility was added, allowing a process to reliably track the
+	running and exiting state of the whole subtree of the processes.
+	It is intended to improve tools like timeout(1) or
 	poudriere, by making it impossible for the runaway grandchild to
 	escape the controlling process.  The feature was designed based on
 	similar facilities in DragonFlyBSD and Linux, with some
@@ -191,17 +191,17 @@
 	data are on stable storage, to minimize damage of failed
 	resume.</p>
 
-      <p>The code stressed some parts of the system and has lead to
-	discovery of a numbers of bugs in different areas,
-	including process management, buffer cache and syscall
-	handlers.  The bugs were fixed, fixes and the features commmitted
+      <p>The code stressed some parts of the system and has led to
+	discovery of a number of bugs in different areas,
+	including process management, buffer cache, and syscall
+	handlers.  The bugs were fixed, and the fixes and features commmitted
 	by a series culminating in r275745.</p>
 
       <p>During the work described above, it
 	was noted that process spinlock duties are significantly
 	overloaded (the same is true for the process lock).  The spinlock
-	was split into per-feature locks, in r275121.  Also, as result, it
-	was possible to eliminate recursion on it, in r275372.</p>
+	was split into per-feature locks in r275121.  As result, it
+	was also possible to eliminate recursion on it in r275372.</p>
     </body>
 
     <sponsor>The FreeBSD Foundation</sponsor>
@@ -242,7 +242,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='misc'>
-    <title>Creating Vagrant images with Packer</title>
+    <title>Creating Vagrant Images with Packer</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -271,14 +271,14 @@
 	create and configure lightweight, reproducible, and portable
 	development environments.</p>
 
-      <p>To get started clone the Git repo and follow the directions in
+      <p>To get started, clone the Git repo and follow the directions in
 	the README.  More information is available from the Packer and
 	Vagrant websites.</p>
     </body>
   </project>
 
   <project cat="proj">
-    <title>pkg(8)</title>
+    <title><tt>pkg(8)</tt></title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -305,9 +305,9 @@
       </p>
 
       <p>An important part of the development direction for the 1.4
-	release has been done on stabilizing the existing features, and
+	release was stabilizing the existing features and
 	improving the <tt>pkg(8)</tt> experience on small/embedded
-	machines (reduce memory usage, speed up operations).</p>
+	machines (reducing memory usage and speeding up operations).</p>
 
       <p><tt>pkg(8)</tt> is not only the &os; Package Manager, but also the
 	Package Manager for DragonflyBSD.  Support has been
@@ -340,7 +340,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat="bin">
-    <title>mandoc(1) support</title>
+    <title><tt>mandoc(1)</tt> Support</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -375,8 +375,8 @@
 	format manual pages by default, then fall back to
 	<tt>groff(1)</tt> if it fails.</p>
  
-      <p>This change also fixes an issue with FreeBSD <tt>man(1)</tt>
-	command not able to properly deal with ".so" in gzipped manual
+      <p>This change also fixes an issue with the &os; <tt>man(1)</tt>
+	command not being able to properly deal with ".so" in gzipped manual
 	pages.</p>
  
       <p>The documentation team has spent a lot of time fixing issues
@@ -386,12 +386,12 @@
       <p>Most manual pages with remaining issues are from contrib/, for
 	which changes should be reported and fixed upstream.</p>
  
-      <p>The "manlint" target has also been switch to use <tt>mandoc
+      <p>The "manlint" target has also been switched to use <tt>mandoc
 	-Tlint</tt>, which results in the target being more useful
 	when working on manual pages.</p>
  
-      <p>Some <tt>groff(1)</tt> vs <tt>mandoc(1)</tt> formatting
-	differencies have been spotted and reported to mandoc's upstream
+      <p>Some <tt>groff(1)</tt> versus <tt>mandoc(1)</tt> formatting
+	differences have been spotted and reported to mandoc's upstream
 	developers.</p>
     </body>
 
@@ -401,8 +401,8 @@
 	  <tt>mandoc(1)</tt>.</p>
       </task>
       <task>
-	<p>Figure out a way to detect non <tt>mandoc(1)</tt> unfriendly
-	  manpages from ports and create catpages with <tt>groff(1)</tt>
+	<p>Figure out a way to detect <tt>mandoc(1)</tt>-unfriendly
+	  manpages in ports and create catpages with <tt>groff(1)</tt>
 	  for them.</p>
       </task>
       <task>
@@ -412,7 +412,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='proj'>
-    <title>External toolchain</title>
+    <title>External Toolchain</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -444,12 +444,12 @@
 
     <body>
       <p>The main goal of the external toolchain project is to be able
-	to build world and kernel with non default toolchain.  It can be
+	to build world and kernel with non-default toolchain.  It can be
 	helpful to:
 	<ul>
 	  <li>Prepare a migration to a newer version of toolchain components.</li>
 	  <li>Port &os; to a new architecture</li>
-	  <li>Upgrade from a &os; that ships with GCC 4.2 to a version that ship with clang 3.5+ (which need a more modern toolchain than GCC 4.2 to bootstrap).</li>
+	  <li>Upgrade from a &os; that ships with GCC 4.2 to a version that ships with clang 3.5+ (which needs a more modern toolchain than GCC 4.2 to bootstrap).</li>
 	</ul>
       </p>
 
@@ -480,7 +480,7 @@
 
       <p>Those packages will depend on special versions of GCC
 	(minimalistic cross-built ready GCC) and on binutils.  To use
-	them run: <tt>make CROSS_TOOLCHAIN=powerpc64-gcc TARGET=powerpc
+	them, run: <tt>make CROSS_TOOLCHAIN=powerpc64-gcc TARGET=powerpc
 	TARGET_ARCH=powerpc64</tt></p>
 
       <p>As a result of this effort, it has been possible to
@@ -504,7 +504,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='kern'>
-    <title>Timer function support for Linuxulator</title>
+    <title>Timer Function Support for Linuxulator</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -520,12 +520,12 @@
       <p>Since 2006, initial support for Linux timer function
 	compatibility support was present but untested.
 	This update corrects the initial implementation and makes it
-	available to the 32bit linuxolator on amd64, not just on i386.
+	available to the 32-bit Linuxulator on amd64, not just on i386.
       </p>
 
       <p>Starting with &os; 10.1, this enables users to run another
 	FPGA high-level synthesis toolchain and emulation platform
-	on a FreeBSD system.
+	on a &os; system.
       </p>
     </body>
 
@@ -551,25 +551,25 @@
     </links>
 
     <body>
-      <p>The FreeBSD GNOME Team maintains the GNOME, MATE and CINNAMON desktop
-	environments and graphical user interfaces for FreeBSD. GNOME 3 is part
+      <p>The &os; GNOME Team maintains the GNOME, MATE, and CINNAMON desktop
+	environments and graphical user interfaces for &os;. GNOME 3 is part
 	of the GNU Project. MATE is a fork of the GNOME 2 desktop. CINNAMON
 	is a desktop environment using GNOME 3 technologies but with a GNOME 2
 	look and feel.</p>
 
       <p>This quarter was an exciting time for the GNOME Team. We imported
 	GNOME 3.14.0 and CINNAMON 2.2.16 into the ports tree. At the same
-	time we removed the old GNOME 2.32 desktop. And two weeks later
+	time, we removed the old GNOME 2.32 desktop. And two weeks later
 	we updated GNOME to 3.14.2 and CINNAMON to 2.4.2, which was collected
 	while the preparation for the initial GNOME 3.14.0 import was
-	underway.</p>
+	under way.</p>
 
       <p>We moved our development repo to GitHub. 
 	The repo is structured as follows: the <tt>master</tt> branch
-	is vanilla &os; Ports, and we have <tt>theme branches</tt> for topics,
+	is vanilla &os; Ports, and we have <tt>theme branches</tt> for topics
 	such as the porting of MATE 1.9 (mate-1.10 branch) and GNOME 3.15
 	(gnome-3.16 branch). The GNOME 3.14 branch (gnome-3.14) is not
-	used/updated anymore because the content has been committed to
+	used or updated any more because the content has been committed to
 	ports, but is kept around for the history.</p>
     </body>
 
@@ -580,12 +580,12 @@
       </task>
 
       <task>
-	<p>MATE 1.10 porting is underway, the latest 1.9 releases are
+	<p>MATE 1.10 porting is under way, the latest 1.9 releases are
 	  available in the mate-1.10 branch.</p>
       </task>
 
       <task>
-	<p>GNOME 3.16 porting is underway, and is available in the
+	<p>GNOME 3.16 porting is under way, and is available in the
 	  gnome-3.16 branch.</p>
       </task>
     </help>
@@ -639,7 +639,7 @@
 	some updates to system sources, and fielded complaints about
 	code quality of some other work in critical areas.
 	While such disagreements will occasionally occur, core is
-	promoting the routine use of the phabricator service in order to
+	promoting the routine use of the Phabricator service in order to
 	review work before committal.  Catching problems early is in the
 	project's best interests, and discussion of changes in an open
 	review context should minimize confrontational demands for
@@ -688,8 +688,8 @@
 	Raphael Kubo da Costa (rakuco@) and Max Brazhnikov (makc@) maintain all
 	Qt and KDE-related ports.</p>
 
-      <p>This quarter, Qt 5.3 was finally committed to the ports tree
-	after extensive work that included cleaning up and/or changing a lot of
+      <p>This quarter, Qt 5.3 was finally committed to the ports tree.
+	Extensive work was required, including cleaning up and/or changing a lot of
 	the Qt5 ports infrastructure to make it both easier to maintain the Qt
 	ports as well as finally make it possible to build newer versions when
 	older ones are already installed on the system.</p>
@@ -728,7 +728,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='doc'>
-    <title>More Michael Lucas books</title>
+    <title>More Michael Lucas Books</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -848,7 +848,7 @@
     <body>
       <p>Since the last status report, many people have contributed
 	help in various areas to help with Continuous Integration
-	and Testing in FreeBSD.  Some of the highlights include:</p>
+	and Testing in &os;.  Some of the highlights include:</p>
 
       <ul>
 	<li>The Jenkins project mentioned on their blog how FreeBSD is using
@@ -894,13 +894,13 @@
 	<li>&a.rodrigc; submitted a formula to create a package for
 	  kyua in the Homebrew packaging system on OS X.  The Homebrew project
 	  accepted this.  Now, kyua can easily be installed on OS X via a
-	  Homebrew package.  Hopefully &os; this will make it easier to share
+	  Homebrew package.  Hopefully this will make it easier to share
 	  more test infrastructure and scripts with OS X.</li>
 
 	<li>&a.rodrigc; submitted to the Debian project a kyua
 	  package.  Approval for this is still pending.  A package
 	  will make it much easier to install kyua on Linux distributions which
-	  use Debian packages such as Debian, Ubuntu and Linux Mint.  Hopefully
+	  use Debian packages such as Debian, Ubuntu, and Linux Mint.  Hopefully
 	  &os; this will make it easier to share more test infrastructure and
 	  scripts with Linux.</li>
 
@@ -908,7 +908,7 @@
 	  Harness for OpenJDK (jtreg).  The test results are in JUnit XML
 	  format, which can be natively imported into Jenkins.</li>
 
-	<li>Ahmed Kamal, an experienced devops expert, and past
+	<li>Ahmed Kamal, an experienced devops expert and past
 	  contributor to the Ubuntu project, offered to help
 	  &a.rodrigc; with improving the automation and deployment of
 	  Jenkins nodes in the &os; cluster using the Saltstack automation
@@ -957,11 +957,10 @@
 
     <body>
       <p>Xfce is a free software desktop environment for Unix and
-	Unix-like platforms, such as FreeBSD. It aims to be fast and
+	Unix-like platforms, such as &os;. It aims to be fast and
 	lightweight, while still being visually appealing and easy to use.</p>
 
-      <p>During this quarter, the team has kept up-to-date the following
-	applications:</p>
+      <p>During this quarter, the team has kept these applications up-to-date:</p>
 
       <ul>
 	<li>misc/xfce4-weather-plugin 0.8.5</li>
@@ -981,8 +980,8 @@
 	<li>x11/xfce4-dashboard</li>
       </ul>
 
-      <p>Moreover, we are working on the next stable release, below list
-	of ports updated:</p>
+      <p>Moreover, we are working on the next stable release, with these
+	ports being updated:</p>
 
       <ul>
 	<li>sysutils/xfce4-power-manager 1.4.2</li>
@@ -1003,16 +1002,16 @@
 
     <help>
       <task>
-	<p>Find workaround when acpi_video(4) is not functional
+	<p>Find workaround <tt>when acpi_video(4)</tt> is not functional
 	  (panel crashes); OpenBSD seems to have same problem.</p>
       </task>
       <task>
-	<p>Cleanup patch in order to add new panel plugin in ports
+	<p>Clean up patch in order to add new panel plugin in ports
 	  tree.</p>
       </task>
       <task>
 	<p>Continue to work on documentation, especially the Porter's
-	  handbook.</p>
+	  Handbook.</p>
       </task>
     </help>
   </project>
@@ -1058,11 +1057,11 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='ports'>
-    <title>The Graphics stack on FreeBSD</title>
+    <title>The Graphics Stack on &os;</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
-	<name>FreeBSD Graphics team</name>
+	<name>&os; Graphics team</name>
 	<email>freebsd-x11 at FreeBSD.org</email>
       </person>
     </contact>
@@ -1079,7 +1078,7 @@
 	now usually updated shortly after a new release.  Mesa 10.x brings
 	huge improvements in terms of OpenGL standards support, performance
 	and stability, especially for Radeon owners.  Mesa 9.1 is kept for
-	FreeBSD 9.x, but we have plans to fix this; see below.</p>
+	&os; 9.x, but we have plans to fix this; see below.</p>
 
       <p><tt>graphics/gbm</tt> and <tt>devel/libclc</tt> are new ports used
 	by Mesa to implement OpenCL.  The next step is to finish the port for
@@ -1090,7 +1089,7 @@
 	of xserver supporting Mesa 9.1.  Changes are described in an article
 	on the blog.  The most noticeable one is the switch from
 	the input device detection back-end based on HAL to the one based on
-	devd(8). hald(8) is still required by many desktop environments, but
+	<tt>devd(8)</tt>. <tt>hald(8)</tt> is still required by many desktop environments, but
 	the X.Org server itself is free from it.</p>
 
       <p>xserver was the last port supporting the <tt>WITH_NEW_XORG</tt>
@@ -1104,7 +1103,7 @@
       <ul>
 	<li><tt>TEXTURE_FLOAT</tt> in graphics/dri, which allows Mesa to
 	  advertise the support for OpenGL 3.0+;</li>
-	<li><tt>LCD_FILTERING</tt> in print/freetype2, which enables the
+	<li><tt>LCD_FILTERING</tt> in <tt>print/freetype2</tt>, which enables the
 	  subpixel rendering engine, improving font anti-aliasing.</li>
       </ul>
 
@@ -1115,12 +1114,12 @@
 
       <p>On the kernel side, Tijl Coosemans added AGP support back to the
 	TTM memory manager and therefore to the Radeon driver.  His work was
-	merged back to stable/10 and will be available in FreeBSD
+	merged back to stable/10 and will be available in &os;
 	10.2-RELEASE.</p>
 
       <p>We migrated our Ports development tree to Git and GitHub.  Tracking
 	changes in the official Ports tree and preparing patches is way
-	easier.  Furthermore, we can accept pull requests. All reasons behind
+	easier.  Furthermore, we can accept pull requests. All of the reasons behind
 	this change are detailed on the blog and the workflow is described
 	on the wiki.</p>
 
@@ -1130,7 +1129,7 @@
 
       <p>Our next items on the roadmap are:</p>
       <ol>
-	<li>Provide FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE's i915 driver to FreeBSD 9.x users
+	<li>Provide &os; 10.1-RELEASE's i915 driver to &os; 9.x users
 	  through a new port.  This is a work in progress, but it would allow
 	  us to remove Mesa 9.1 and make Mesa 10.4 available everywhere.</li>
 	<li>Once Mesa 9.1 is gone, we can update xserver to 1.16.</li>
@@ -1246,10 +1245,10 @@
 
     <body>
       <p>During this quarter almost all pending Xen changes have been
-	committed, enabling FreeBSD to be used as Dom0 under the new
-	PVH mode. The set of features supported by FreeBSD is still limited,
-	but it should allow for basic usage of FreeBSD as Dom0. Support for
-	booting Xen from the FreeBSD boot loader will be committed very soon
+	committed, enabling &os; to be used as Dom0 under the new
+	PVH mode. The set of features supported by &os; is still limited,
+	but it should allow for basic usage of &os; as Dom0. Support for
+	booting Xen from the &os; boot loader will be committed very soon
 	to HEAD.</p>
 
       <p>Apart from testing on a variety of hardware, work has now
@@ -1257,8 +1256,8 @@
 	parity with a traditional PV Dom0 and to declare the PVH ABI as
 	stable.</p>
 
-      <p>Regarding guest improvements (running FreeBSD as a DomU),
-	there's also ongoing work to add unmapped IO support to Xen blkfront,
+      <p>Regarding guest improvements (running &os; as a DomU),
+	there is also ongoing work to add unmapped IO support to Xen blkfront,
 	which is blocked pending some modifications to the generic bounce
 	buffer code.</p>
     </body>
@@ -1287,7 +1286,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='proj'>
-    <title>Clang, llvm and lldb updated to 3.5.0</title>
+    <title>Clang, <tt>llvm</tt>, and <tt>lldb</tt> Updated to 3.5.0</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -1319,13 +1318,13 @@
     </links>
 
     <body>
-      <p>Just before the end of the year, we have updated clang,
-	llvm and lldb in the base system to 3.5.0 release.  These all contain
-	numerous improvements; please see the linked release notes for
+      <p>Just before the end of the year, we updated clang,
+	llvm, and lldb in the base system to 3.5.0 release.  These all contain
+	numerous improvements.  Please see the linked release notes for
 	more detailed information.</p>
 
       <p>This is the first release that requires C++11 support to build.
-	At this point, FreeBSD 10.0 and later provide that support, at least
+	At this point, &os; 10.0 and later provide that support, at least
 	on x86.</p>
 
       <p>In the near future, more components from llvm.org will
@@ -1333,7 +1332,7 @@
 	being the first.</p>
 
       <p>Thanks to Ed Maste, Roman Divacky, Andrew Turner, Justin
-	Hibbits and Antoine Brodin for their invaluable help with this
+	Hibbits, and Antoine Brodin for their invaluable help with this
 	import.</p>
     </body>
 
@@ -1350,7 +1349,7 @@
       </task>
 
       <task>
-	<p>There are still some open issues with the ARM, PowerPC
+	<p>There are still some open issues with the ARM, PowerPC,
 	  and Sparc64 architectures, and any help in this area is very much
 	  appreciated.</p>
       </task>
@@ -1398,7 +1397,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='proj'>
-    <title>Git integration</title>
+    <title>Git Integration</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -1471,7 +1470,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='proj'>
-    <title>Migration to ELF Tool Chain tools</title>
+    <title>Migration to ELF Tool Chain Tools</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -1557,7 +1556,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='proj'>
-    <title>bhyve</title>
+    <title><tt>bhyve</tt></title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -1764,9 +1763,9 @@
       <p>As of the end of Q4 the ports tree holds more than 24,000
 	ports, and the PR count is just over 1,400.  As during the
 	previous quarter the tree saw a sustained activity with
-	almost 6,000 commits and more than 1,600 ports PR closed!</p>
+	almost 6,000 commits and more than 1,600 ports PRs closed!</p>
 
-      <p>In Q4 five new developers were granted a ports commit bit
+      <p>In Q4, five new developers were granted a ports commit bit
 	(gordon@, jmg@, jmmv@, bofh@, truckman@) and six were taken
 	in for safekeeping (sylvio@, pclin@, flz@, jsa@, anders@,
 	motoyuki@).</p>
@@ -1778,7 +1777,7 @@
       <p>This quarter also saw the release of the fourth quarterly
 	branch, namely 2014Q4.</p>
 
-      <p>On QA side 39 exp-runs were performed to validate sensitive
+      <p>On the QA side, 39 exp-runs were performed to validate sensitive
 	updates or cleanups.</p>
 
     </body>
@@ -1793,14 +1792,14 @@
       <task>
 	<p>2014 is the year that saw the highest number of commits
 	  in all of our ports tree's history!  As for the PR front and
-	  to keep our beloved tree in such a good shape we would love
+	  to keep our beloved tree in good shape, we would love
 	  to see the same commitment from our developers next year!</p>
       </task>
     </help>
   </project>
 
   <project cat='kern'>
-    <title>Linux emulation layer a.k.a. Linuxulator</title>
+    <title>Linux Emulation Layer, the Linuxulator</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -1823,10 +1822,10 @@
 	version 2.20 or later to be available on &os;.  Glibc 2.20
 	requires a Linux kernel (or emulation thereof) of version 2.6.32
 	or later.  The main obstacle preventing this is that the current
-	Linuxulator uses native FreeBSD processes for emulating Linux
+	Linuxulator uses native &os; processes for emulating Linux
 	threads.  This leads to several problems, including problems with
 	process reparenting and dethreading, <tt>wait()</tt> and signal
-	handling.  It would be much better to reuse the FreeBSD kernel
+	handling.  It would be much better to reuse the &os; kernel
 	code for thread management than to create a completely new
 	codebase for pseudothread management in the Linuxulator.</p>
 
@@ -1848,8 +1847,8 @@
 	<li>Many bugs were fixed</li>
       </ul>
 
-      <p>The project's code is located in the FreeBSD Project's
-	Subversion repository, at <tt>base/user/dchagin/lemul</tt> (a
+      <p>The project's code is located in the &os; Project's
+	Subversion repository at <tt>base/user/dchagin/lemul</tt> (a
 	little bit old).  To facilitate merging the improvements back to
 	head, several patches have been placed on reviews.FreeBSD.org with
 	the tag <tt>#lemul</tt>.  Nearly half of the patches have already
@@ -1883,7 +1882,7 @@
       </task>
 
       <task>
-	<p>Extend xucred suppport, which is required for many Linux
+	<p>Extend xucred support, required for many Linux
 	  applications.</p>
       </task>
     </help>
@@ -1936,7 +1935,7 @@
 
       <p>The ports have packages built for amd64 (available through the
 	ports emulators/i386-wine and i386-wine-devel) for &os; 8.4, 9.1+,
-	10.0+ and CURRENT.</p>
+	10.0+, and CURRENT.</p>
 
       <p>Accomplishments include:</p>
 
@@ -1957,9 +1956,9 @@
 	<li>Various smaller changes.</li>
       </ul>
 
-      <p>We would like to thank all volunteers who contributed feedback
+      <p>We would like to thank all the volunteers who contributed feedback
 	or even patches.  We would also like to welcome kmoore@ to the Wine
-	team.  He has been extensively involved in bring wine-compholio to the
+	team.  He has been extensively involved in bringing wine-compholio to the
 	Ports Collection.</p>
 
       <p>Future development on Wine will focus on:</p>
@@ -1971,9 +1970,9 @@
       </ul>
 
       <p>Maintaining and improving Wine is a major undertaking that
-	directly impacts end-users on &os; (including many gamers).  If you
-	are interested in helping please contact us.  We will happily accept
-	patches, suggest areas of focus or have a chat.</p>
+	directly impacts end-users on &os;, including many gamers.  If you
+	are interested in helping, please contact us.  We will happily accept
+	patches, suggest areas of focus, or have a chat.</p>
     </body>
 
     <help>
@@ -1983,7 +1982,7 @@
       </task>
 
       <task>
-	<p>FreeBSD/amd64 integration (see the <a
+	<p>&os;/amd64 integration (see the <a
 	    href="http://wiki.FreeBSD.org/i386-Wine">i386-Wine wiki page</a>).</p>
       </task>
 
@@ -1994,7 +1993,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='ports'>
-    <title>Linux emulation ports</title>
+    <title>Linux Emulation Ports</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -2155,7 +2154,7 @@
 
       <ul>
 	<li>creating ports/packages of the gnu-efi toolchain,
-	  Matthew Garrett’s shim loader, and sbsigntools</li>
+	  Matthew Garrett's shim loader, and sbsigntools</li>
 	<li>extending the shim to provide an API for boot1.efi to
 	  load and verify binaries signed by keys known to the shim</li>
 	<li>writing uefisign(8), a BSD-licensed utility to sign EFI
@@ -2220,8 +2219,8 @@
 
     <body>
       <p>There is growing interest in ARM's 64-bit architecture.
-	Officially named as AArch64, it is also known as ARMv8 and arm64.
-	Andrew Turner started initial work on the FreeBSD/arm64 port at
+	Officially named AArch64, it is also known as ARMv8 and arm64.
+	Andrew Turner started initial work on the &os;/arm64 port at
 	the end of 2012.</p>
 
       <p>The &os; Foundation is now collaborating with ARM,
@@ -2229,9 +2228,9 @@
 	arm64, and significant progress was made on the port over the last
 	quarter of 2014.</p>
 
-      <p>As of the end of the year &os; boots to single-user mode
+      <p>As of the end of the year, &os; boots to single-user mode
 	on arm64, executing both static and dynamic applications. Patches
-	in review allow &os; to boot to multi-user mode and these are
+	in review allow &os; to boot to multi-user mode, and these are
 	expected to be merged soon. This includes implementing many stub
 	functions in userland and the kernel. With this, &os; has booted to
 	multi-user mode on both the ARM Foundation Model and the QEMU full
@@ -2279,7 +2278,7 @@
   </project>
 
   <project cat='bin'>
-    <title>libxo: generate text, XML, JSON, and HTML output</title>
+    <title><tt>libxo</tt>: Generate Text, XML, JSON, and HTML Output</title>
 
     <contact>
       <person>
@@ -2308,9 +2307,9 @@
 
       <p>Juniper Networks has created a library called libxo, which 
 	makes it easy for utilities to emit output in various
-	formats.  By default the text output is emitted, but with the
-	introduction of the <tt>—libxo</tt> option this can be changed to
-	XML, JSON and HTML.  The &os; project has imported this library
+	formats.  By default, text output is emitted, but with the
+	introduction of the <tt>--libxo</tt> option this can be changed to
+	XML, JSON, and HTML.  The &os; project has imported this library
 	into the base system and is in the process of rewriting utilities
 	to use libxo.</p>
 


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