Re: [fpc-other] Re: fpc-other Digest, Vol 62, Issue 1

2012-10-07 Thread Jonas Maebe

On 06 Oct 2012, at 23:17, Tomas Hajny wrote:

 To be fair, it's probably useful to mention that the example forum 
 prepared by Peter should be better compared to the forum we currently 
 provide on FPC pages (community.freepascal.org) rather than NNTP 
 newsgroups, etc., which we do not provide at the moment anyway.

He unsubscribed from all FPC lists immediately after he sent his last message.


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Re: [fpc-other] Re: fpc-other Digest, Vol 62, Issue 1

2012-10-07 Thread Marco van de Voort
In our previous episode, Mark Morgan Lloyd said:
  
  He unsubscribed from all FPC lists immediately after he sent his last 
  message.
 
 Highly regrettable, but at least it happened /before/ all of the mailing 
 lists etc. were transitioned to a system which the core project 
 maintainers didn't understand and might not be in control of.
 
 That's not to say that the current system is perfect, in particular I 
 think that everybody agrees that better integration of forums and 
 mailing lists would be a Good Thing.

Personally, I think the whole discussion has to be too tools centric.
Content, that matters.

That is not to say that the current website doesn't have problems (a TCL
dependency to regenerate the makefiles, and the generator tool has a custom
cwstring that needs regular fixing).

IIRC I can't currently run all of it on FreeBSD, so I actually update the
website from a work fedora machine.

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Re: [fpc-other] Re: fpc-other Digest, Vol 62, Issue 1

2012-10-07 Thread Marco van de Voort
In our previous episode, Jonas Maebe said:
  Highly regrettable, but at least it happened /before/ all of the mailing
  lists etc.  were transitioned to a system which the core project
  maintainers didn't understand and might not be in control of.
 
 I don't think he ever insisted on that, and even if he did, that would
 never have happened.  He was offering to help, not threatening a hostile
 takeover.  As Tomas said, his proposal would have been a good candidate
 for replacing the broken community site.

Why run a separate forum from Lazarus?
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Re: [fpc-other] Re: fpc-other Digest, Vol 62, Issue 1

2012-10-07 Thread Jonas Maebe

On 07 Oct 2012, at 12:17, Marco van de Voort wrote:

 Why run a separate forum from Lazarus?

The current fora are already separate, so switching to better forum software 
would have been an improvement as far as I'm concerned. Merging the FPC and 
Lazarus fora has been discussed/proposed for many years already and nothing 
ever happened. I guess one of the reasons is the integration of the community 
forum account system with the bug tracker though, and that probably wouldn't 
have been easier to address if the community site were switched over separately.

Anyway, the point is moot now.


Jonas

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Re: [fpc-other] Re: fpc-other Digest, Vol 62, Issue 1

2012-10-06 Thread Graeme Geldenhuys
On 2012-10-06 00:08, Cephas Atheos wrote:
 
 You're not seriously comparing nntp clients with
 browser clients and claiming that news servers are just as popular and
 useable as forums, and more reliable to boot? Seriously? Seriously?

Well, I think so.


 One of the critical points I tried to make when suggesting a forum as an
 option, was moving ALL the historical data to the forum DB, to make it

Well, maybe try and do that first, because telling everybody to try the
forum. Currently there is NO historical data in that forum you setup.

I also couldn't find a way to show a treeview style list of discussions.
I rely on a treeview style overview of conversations... who replied to
what message. This is why I hate Gmail, as it simply lumps the last
response to the bottom of a long list. That doesn't give me any
indication to what message that person replied to, and I can't follow
the various branches (discussions) in the same thread.

 professionalism or my discipline, simply because I recommended an
 improvement to the current state of the FPC site. 

Maybe you are tackling something that isn't actually a problem. The
mailing list (even though I don't like them much) are working. Maybe
concentrate your efforts on the website improvements instead. Get more
usable information easily available on the FPC home page. Add a more
detailed menu on the FPC site so we can pick what we want to view,
without navigating through many static pages, etc.

Regards,
  - Graeme -

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Re: [fpc-other] Re: fpc-other Digest, Vol 62, Issue 1

2012-10-06 Thread Giuliano Colla

Cephas Atheos ha scritto:
[..]


I knew that I wasn't going to convince anyone who wasn't willing to give
new technology a fair go! But we do need to at least be fair with our
evaluation of technology, not just go with what we know and love. It's not
fair to the users who may not know the difference, or who may have been
genuinely interested in better ways of communicating with everyone else
here.


[...]

I'm afraid that you're are under the false impression of talking to a 
newbee audience, who's never seen a forum in his life.


The sample forum you proposed is very similar to the one I did set up 
for a cultural association I'm member of. It uses the same tools and 
also the layout isn't very different. For its purpose it is quite easy 
to use, and the most suitable tool. I would never have dreamed to 
propose to this association to set up a newsgroup.
But, by knowing this tool, and by knowing also other tools, such as the 
capabilities of modern mail clients, I fully agree with Graeme that the 
forum is a clumsy tool as compared to a newsgroup, as far as fpc/Lazarus 
developers requirements, needs and capabilities are concerned. Different 
purposes and different audiences need different tools.


May I remind you that being more modern doesn't mean more suitable?
Tombstones are still made of stone. Stone age technology. But the most 
suitable for that purpose. A plastic sheet printed with the latest 
digital printing technology appears much more modern, but id would fly 
away at the first wind blow, and it would fade away under the sun in a 
few months.
Nobody today would dream to carve a public announcement on a stone slab, 
as it was customary in ancient Rome, but nonetheless there's a field 
where stone age technology is still the most suitable.


Please do follow Graeme suggestions, and concentrate where problems 
exist, and improvements would be welcome. Fpc/Lazarus Wiki search is a 
nightmare, because there's no decent content based indexing: if what 
you're searching for is not on a page title it can't be found. Fpc 
website usability is very poor. In those fields more modern tools, and 
someone willing to devote some time would help a lot.


Giuliano

--
Giuliano Colla

Before activating the tongue, make sure that the brain is connected 
(anonymous)

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Re: [fpc-other] Re: fpc-other Digest, Vol 62, Issue 1

2012-10-06 Thread Tomas Hajny
On 6 Oct 12, at 17:12, Giuliano Colla wrote:
 Cephas Atheos ha scritto:
 [..]
  
  I knew that I wasn't going to convince anyone who wasn't willing to give
  new technology a fair go! But we do need to at least be fair with our
  evaluation of technology, not just go with what we know and love. It's not
  fair to the users who may not know the difference, or who may have been
  genuinely interested in better ways of communicating with everyone else
  here.
 
 [...]
 
 I'm afraid that you're are under the false impression of talking to a 
 newbee audience, who's never seen a forum in his life.
 
 The sample forum you proposed is very similar to the one I did set up 
 for a cultural association I'm member of. It uses the same tools and 
 .
 .
 Please do follow Graeme suggestions, and concentrate where problems 
 exist, and improvements would be welcome. Fpc/Lazarus Wiki search is a 
 nightmare, because there's no decent content based indexing: if what 
 you're searching for is not on a page title it can't be found. Fpc 
 website usability is very poor. In those fields more modern tools, and 
 someone willing to devote some time would help a lot.

To be fair, it's probably useful to mention that the example forum 
prepared by Peter should be better compared to the forum we currently 
provide on FPC pages (community.freepascal.org) rather than NNTP 
newsgroups, etc., which we do not provide at the moment anyway. There 
_are_ issues with the existing WWW forum (e.g. the notifications work 
incorrectly). I do not say that it is the most important problem of 
our WWW site, but there is still some room for improvement there.

Nevertheless, the provided example shall be accompanied by 
description of the supposed transition scenario. First of all, it is 
important to understand whether the created example was meant to 
replace just the existing WWW forum or the whole site (possibly 
including the Wiki, bug tracker, etc.) / supporting infrastructure. 
If it's the former, alright, let's discuss advantages and 
disadvantages compared to our current one with regard to all aspects 
(usability, features, involved infrastructure, security, operability 
and support of the forum software, etc.). At the end, we can put the 
advantages and disadvantages on one page and then decide whether to 
change or not. As an example, one disadvantage I can see so far is 
that it lacks the benefit of very easy (and user controlled) 
possibility of localization to other languages. That feature is 
actually used right now and there are quite a few localizations 
available (partly created by our users) matching the possibility to 
discuss FPC related questions also in other languages than just 
English (which is important for some our users who do not speak 
English so well). Sacrificing that feature may be an option, but we 
should understand the reasons for doing so.

Another question - is the forum structure supposed to be part of the 
proposal? If yes, it would be useful to get some arguments why this 
structure fits better than the current one. In my opinion, the 
prepared structure focuses too much on just installing and specific 
architectures and too little to general cross-platform development 
(which is one of the FPC strengths and an important benefit of FPC).

If the proposal was meant to replace the whole FPC site (as 
potentially suggested e.g. by mentioning the download options on a 
very prominent place and not having links to the other WWW resources 
like the bug tracker), I have sincere doubts. I hope that it wasn't 
meant that way, but I'll wait for the response.

If the prepared sample forum is supposed to replace not only the 
existing WWW forum but also the existing mailing lists (completely)? 
This hasn't been stated (yet), although I suspect that it might have 
been meant that way based on some previous statements. If this is the 
case, it would be useful to provide some statements regarding 
different access options - even 'up to date' forum solutions like 
Google Groups provide options for accessing the fora via e-mail (in 
both directions, i.e. for both reading and responding). Is something 
like that supported by the created example in order to provide 
benefits of both approaches (again related to description of supposed 
transition from the current state mentioned above)?

Tomas

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