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Rhea is developed and maintained by a team of student volunteers. If you would like to join the development team, click [[How to join the Rhea development team |here]].
 
Rhea is developed and maintained by a team of student volunteers. If you would like to join the development team, click [[How to join the Rhea development team |here]].
 
</center>
 
</center>
 
+
<center>
 
==Meet the Current Student Development team ==
 
==Meet the Current Student Development team ==
 +
</center>
  
 
The team for the Spring 2009 semester is currently being formed.  
 
The team for the Spring 2009 semester is currently being formed.  
 
+
<center>
 
==Meet the Fall 2008 Student Development team ==
 
==Meet the Fall 2008 Student Development team ==
 
{| cellspacing="10"
 
{| cellspacing="10"
 
|-
 
|-
! Ben Brame || [[Image:bbrame.jpg]] || Ben noined the project bla bla bla bls bi uzgr kzgds rkzydsrk zyr uyz
+
! [[Image:bbrame.jpg]] || [[Image:Dkingsmi.jpg]] || [[Image:stephen_rudolph.jpg]] || [[Image:dennis_snell.jpg]] || [[Image:Mike.jpg]]
 
|-
 
|-
! Deen King-Smith  || [[Image:Dkingsmi.jpg]]
 
 
|-
 
|-
! Stephen Rudolph || [[Image:stephen_rudolph.jpg]]
+
! Ben Brame || Deen King-Smith  || Stephen Rudolph || Dennis Snell || Mike Walker || Ben Horst
|-
+
! Dennis Snell || [[Image:dennis_snell.jpg]]
+
|-
+
! Mike Walker || [[Image:Mike.jpg]]
+
 
|-
 
|-
 +
!
 
|}
 
|}
 +
</center>
 +
The Fall 2008 development team took care of migrating Kiwi into Rhea, which was inevitable to a name conflict. Ben Horst designed the Rhea logos. Dennis Snell and Mike Walker worked on developing the new skin with the Purdue color and a design distinctive from wikipedia. Stephen Rudolph and Mike Walker set up a backup server. Dennis Snell set up SVN. Ben Brame enabled dual login. TO BE CONTINUED.
  
 
+
<center>
 
== Initial Development Work ==
 
== Initial Development Work ==
 +
</center>
 
The initial development work was done in the Summer of 2007  by Katie Bouman (now at U. of Michigan) under the supervision of Professor Mimi Boutin. Katie remained on the project until the end of Summer 2008, participating in outreach activities and helping to create the kiwi instructinal video.  
 
The initial development work was done in the Summer of 2007  by Katie Bouman (now at U. of Michigan) under the supervision of Professor Mimi Boutin. Katie remained on the project until the end of Summer 2008, participating in outreach activities and helping to create the kiwi instructinal video.  
 
[[User:dmsnell|Dennis Snell]], an undergraduate student in ECE at Purdue, was instrumental in developing the first version of the kiwi using the zope software in Fall 2008 and concretely defining the project. He also orchestrated the migration to mediaWiki in Spring 2008.  
 
[[User:dmsnell|Dennis Snell]], an undergraduate student in ECE at Purdue, was instrumental in developing the first version of the kiwi using the zope software in Fall 2008 and concretely defining the project. He also orchestrated the migration to mediaWiki in Spring 2008.  
 
[[User:dkingsmi|Deen King-Smith]], a PhD student in ECE, took a leading role in the project in Spring 2008.  [[User:wehlhard|William Ehlhardt]], an undergraduate student in ECE, attacked some information management challenges in the Summer of 2008. He is also the one who designed the kiwi mascot and he is the voice on the kiwi instructional video. Stephen Rudolph, a masters student in ECE, took the lead of the project in the Summer 2008 and organized the migration to the new server. Ben Horst developed the Rhea logos in September 08.
 
[[User:dkingsmi|Deen King-Smith]], a PhD student in ECE, took a leading role in the project in Spring 2008.  [[User:wehlhard|William Ehlhardt]], an undergraduate student in ECE, attacked some information management challenges in the Summer of 2008. He is also the one who designed the kiwi mascot and he is the voice on the kiwi instructional video. Stephen Rudolph, a masters student in ECE, took the lead of the project in the Summer 2008 and organized the migration to the new server. Ben Horst developed the Rhea logos in September 08.

Revision as of 13:22, 31 December 2008

Who is behind all this?

Rhea is developed and maintained by a team of student volunteers. If you would like to join the development team, click here.

Meet the Current Student Development team

The team for the Spring 2009 semester is currently being formed.

Meet the Fall 2008 Student Development team

Bbrame.jpg Dkingsmi.jpg Stephen rudolph.jpg Dennis snell.jpg Mike.jpg
Ben Brame Deen King-Smith Stephen Rudolph Dennis Snell Mike Walker Ben Horst

The Fall 2008 development team took care of migrating Kiwi into Rhea, which was inevitable to a name conflict. Ben Horst designed the Rhea logos. Dennis Snell and Mike Walker worked on developing the new skin with the Purdue color and a design distinctive from wikipedia. Stephen Rudolph and Mike Walker set up a backup server. Dennis Snell set up SVN. Ben Brame enabled dual login. TO BE CONTINUED.

Initial Development Work

The initial development work was done in the Summer of 2007 by Katie Bouman (now at U. of Michigan) under the supervision of Professor Mimi Boutin. Katie remained on the project until the end of Summer 2008, participating in outreach activities and helping to create the kiwi instructinal video. Dennis Snell, an undergraduate student in ECE at Purdue, was instrumental in developing the first version of the kiwi using the zope software in Fall 2008 and concretely defining the project. He also orchestrated the migration to mediaWiki in Spring 2008. Deen King-Smith, a PhD student in ECE, took a leading role in the project in Spring 2008. William Ehlhardt, an undergraduate student in ECE, attacked some information management challenges in the Summer of 2008. He is also the one who designed the kiwi mascot and he is the voice on the kiwi instructional video. Stephen Rudolph, a masters student in ECE, took the lead of the project in the Summer 2008 and organized the migration to the new server. Ben Horst developed the Rhea logos in September 08.

Alumni Liaison

Correspondence Chess Grandmaster and Purdue Alumni

Prof. Dan Fleetwood