Hello!
Agreed on all points. However there is (idle) speculation that Source
Forge can do their project sites as Wikis.

Stefan you mention that there's a name there that you've never seen on
this list. I see that shown.

Also we note that (sadly) Paul is gone. When was his last posting?
I've also noted as before that I'm now a project admin, I believe that
that the two are connected.
-----
Gregg C Levine gregg.drw...@gmail.com
"This signature fought the Time Wars, time and again."


On Tue, Jul 26, 2016 at 9:35 AM, Stefano Miccoli <mo...@icloud.com> wrote:
>
> On 26 Jul 2016, at 10:18, Jan Kandziora <j...@gmx.de> wrote:
>
> If I had to decide, I would take all the content of the web site, throw
> out all the out-of-date information and feed the rest into a Mediawiki,
> where you and others can maintain it yourself. Then shutdown the old
> website.
>
>
> MediaWiki is dynamic (PHP+SQL), which means hosting and the need for a
> sysop, responsible for maintenance and security.
>
> Why not a static solution, with a push-to-publish approach? Examples are
> https://readthedocs.org or https://pages.github.com.
> Or more precisely, referring to the technology, and not the hosting service
>
> Sphinx http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/ (which is almost the standard in
> the python world)
> Jekyll https://jekyllrb.com
>
> But there are tons of other static site generators, more or less integrated
> with a version control software system like git.
>
> I think that a wiki makes sense if there are hundreds of contributors. For
> smaller projects, maybe, a static approach is more manageable. Of course,
> for getting started we need someone that builds the necessary scaffolding,
> before one is able to contribute content (via pull requests). (And sorry, I
> have no time to contribute to the project right now.)
>
> BTW, who is responsible for owfs.org? On whois
> https://whois.icann.org/en/lookup?name=owfs.org there is a registrant
> contact that I never saw on this list...
>
>
>
> Stefano
>
>
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What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic
patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are 
consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, 
J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity planning
reports.http://sdm.link/zohodev2dev
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