Here's another Call for Volunteers...
The Inkscape FAQ is pretty good, but it's been a long time since someone did a thorough review of it and brought it up to date.
We need someone who is reasonably knowledgeable about Inkscape to go through it and bring it a little more up to date. I think it probably also ought to have a table of contents with links to the Q's...
1. Save this webpage to your disk: http://inkscape.org/faq.php 2. Open it in a text editor 3. Review/revise each question 4. Add new questions you think are worth putting in 5. Remove any questions that are obsolete 6. Post your results here for a web guy to put on the site
If you already have access for updating the Inkscape site, feel free to commit and update directly.
Bryce
Bryce Harrington wrote:
Here's another Call for Volunteers...
The Inkscape FAQ is pretty good, but it's been a long time since someone did a thorough review of it and brought it up to date.
We need someone who is reasonably knowledgeable about Inkscape to go through it and bring it a little more up to date. I think it probably also ought to have a table of contents with links to the Q's...
- Save this webpage to your disk: http://inkscape.org/faq.php
- Open it in a text editor
- Review/revise each question
- Add new questions you think are worth putting in
- Remove any questions that are obsolete
- Post your results here for a web guy to put on the site
If you already have access for updating the Inkscape site, feel free to commit and update directly.
was considered before the possibility to use a Wiki page for hosting the FAQ? i believe this can greatly simplify your 6-step proposed procedure, this is a prefect use case for a Wiki
On Sat, 1 Jan 2005, Nicu Buculei wrote:
Bryce Harrington wrote:
Here's another Call for Volunteers...
The Inkscape FAQ is pretty good, but it's been a long time since someone did a thorough review of it and brought it up to date.
We need someone who is reasonably knowledgeable about Inkscape to go through it and bring it a little more up to date. I think it probably also ought to have a table of contents with links to the Q's...
- Save this webpage to your disk: http://inkscape.org/faq.php
- Open it in a text editor
- Review/revise each question
- Add new questions you think are worth putting in
- Remove any questions that are obsolete
- Post your results here for a web guy to put on the site
If you already have access for updating the Inkscape site, feel free to commit and update directly.
was considered before the possibility to use a Wiki page for hosting the FAQ? i believe this can greatly simplify your 6-step proposed procedure, this is a prefect use case for a Wiki
I don't remember why this was done as a regular web page instead of a wiki page, but I'd support switching to a wiki if someone sets it up. You make a good point that this is a perfect use casefor a Wiki.
Bryce
Bryce Harrington wrote:
On Sat, 1 Jan 2005, Nicu Buculei wrote:
Bryce Harrington wrote:
Here's another Call for Volunteers...
The Inkscape FAQ is pretty good, but it's been a long time since someone did a thorough review of it and brought it up to date.
We need someone who is reasonably knowledgeable about Inkscape to go through it and bring it a little more up to date. I think it probably also ought to have a table of contents with links to the Q's...
- Save this webpage to your disk: http://inkscape.org/faq.php
- Open it in a text editor
- Review/revise each question
- Add new questions you think are worth putting in
- Remove any questions that are obsolete
- Post your results here for a web guy to put on the site
If you already have access for updating the Inkscape site, feel free to commit and update directly.
was considered before the possibility to use a Wiki page for hosting the FAQ? i believe this can greatly simplify your 6-step proposed procedure, this is a prefect use case for a Wiki
I don't remember why this was done as a regular web page instead of a wiki page, but I'd support switching to a wiki if someone sets it up. You make a good point that this is a perfect use casefor a Wiki.
Yes, any of these pages like that should be shifted onto the wiki. This is how its done on OCAL. It just saves time.
Jon
On Sat, 1 Jan 2005, Bryce Harrington wrote:
Date: Sat, 1 Jan 2005 00:56:29 -0800 (PST) From: Bryce Harrington <bryce@...260...> To: Nicu Buculei <nicu@...398...> Cc: inkscape-devel@lists.sourceforge.net Subject: Re: [Inkscape-devel] CFV: Update Inkscape FAQ
On Sat, 1 Jan 2005, Nicu Buculei wrote:
Bryce Harrington wrote:
Here's another Call for Volunteers...
The Inkscape FAQ is pretty good, but it's been a long time since someone did a thorough review of it and brought it up to date.
<snip>
was considered before the possibility to use a Wiki page for hosting the FAQ? i believe this can greatly simplify your 6-step proposed procedure, this is a prefect use case for a Wiki
I don't remember why this was done as a regular web page instead of a wiki page, but I'd support switching to a wiki if someone sets it up. You make a good point that this is a perfect use casefor a Wiki.
I think it got defaced a lot very early on and also I think there was some notion of using Wiki for creating pages and moving them to static pages when they were more complete. For a page as important and high profile as the FAQ it might be worth considering some extra controls such as moderation or some other way to carefully track changes.
- Alan
On Sun, 2 Jan 2005, Alan Horkan wrote:
was considered before the possibility to use a Wiki page for hosting the FAQ? i believe this can greatly simplify your 6-step proposed procedure, this is a prefect use case for a Wiki
I don't remember why this was done as a regular web page instead of a wiki page, but I'd support switching to a wiki if someone sets it up. You make a good point that this is a perfect use casefor a Wiki.
I think it got defaced a lot very early on and also I think there was some notion of using Wiki for creating pages and moving them to static pages when they were more complete.
It appears that we've managed to lick the defacement problem. Reports of wikispam have been as low as I can ever recall since the start of the project.
For a page as important and high profile as the FAQ it might be worth considering some extra controls such as moderation or some other way to carefully track changes.
Wiki includes a capability for doing administrative locking. More importantly, wiki's Change History function provides really accessible ways to track changes (even simpler than it is with CVS imho).
Wikipedia does a good job of controlling/moderating/tracking changes by a LOT of people with many different biases to important, high profile pages. If they can do it with wiki, I have every confidence that we can too. :-)
For me, the larger issue is the current infrequency of updating that the FAQ gets. I think having it in CVS makes it a bit too much hassle for most folks to bother with it. Some churn/inaccuracy in the FAQ would be acceptable if it meant that it gets more frequent updating.
Bryce
participants (4)
-
Alan Horkan
-
Bryce Harrington
-
Jon Phillips
-
Nicu Buculei