docWikis
Lynch, Jonathan
bnz2 at cdc.gov
Tue Oct 18 11:10:15 EDT 2005
You can't convince everyone, but you don't need to.
If you convince a few, that will get the ball rolling.
I would participate in whatever rev doc wiki is most popular. Someone
mentioned there is more than one - are any of them being added to?
And... it does not necessarily require experts to directly contribute.
Non-experts and copy answers from this list over the wiki. Participating
in the wiki will help non-experts become experts as they trod through
the minute details of any given function or command.
-----Original Message-----
From: use-revolution-bounces at lists.runrev.com
[mailto:use-revolution-bounces at lists.runrev.com] On Behalf Of David
Bovill
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2005 6:43 AM
To: How to use Revolution
Subject: Re: docWikis
Hmmm... not going to convince you then :)
If you have seen the progress of wikipedia over the last 2 and a bit
years from unfunded nothing to one of the worlds most valuable
multilingual encyclopaedias based on idiotically simple technology
that could have been built in revolution in a month by a single
developer, and based on the input of hundreds of thousands of
unherdable cats, plus a few freaks, with nothing but an collectively
organised skeleton of an editorial process...
Try deleting a page on wikipedia or defacing it and see how long it
takes to be replaces by all those "cats". Take a look at how many
tiny contributions and corrections are posted every minute by people
with "wives that would kill them" - the best sort :) There is an irc
channel somewhere - which last time i checked was showing around 20
posts (ie modifications and new contributiuons) every minute.
Paid dedicated centrally controlled editorial is not the only way to
produce quality - social filtering and structured openess goes a long
way in defined application areas.
On 18 Oct 2005, at 03:06, Jim Ault wrote:
> Of course, who decides what qualifies as good/excellent content..
> Expert
> level, moderate, beginner, one example, two, five, .. fastest
> algorithm,
> easiest to write.. how to put pieces together to solve scenarios..
> catalog
> the exceptions and bugs.. even to build a rudimentary decision tree
> for
> someone to follow to build an app..
>
> All would be a very large task for several individuals. Add to the
> mix that
> the most accomplished contributors are advanced because they do
> this for a
> living which means they have no time for their own documentation of
> projects, let alone building a knowledge base.
>
> In our little corner of the programming universe, I think that most
> anyone
> only has time to skim, collect some valuable tidbits, contribute
> answers as
> time and mood permit, then go on with our lives.
>
> As they say, "managing programmers is like herding cats", and that
> is the
> way it should be. I wish you good luck getting support. If I
> decided to
> follow this path and contribute, my wife would kill me.
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