On Wed, Feb 07, 2007 at 01:32:24PM -0500, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote: > On Wed, Feb 07, 2007 at 08:24:47PM +0200, Andrei Popescu wrote: > > On Wed, 7 Feb 2007 11:58:11 -0500 Douglas Allan Tutty wrote: > > > Concurrent versioning solves exactly that. You download a copy of the > > file, edit it locally and then upload the changed file. If the original > > file has changed the changes are merged if they don't conflict or you > > get a notice and you can solve the conflict manually. > > > > > I _think_ that a wiki makes this a lot faster. It allows us to > > > generate html. However, it makes it difficult to break it up into > > > small documents and link them together again, and to make other > > > formats. > > > > I think the wiki should be our primary focus, then use the content from > > the wiki to create other versions (html, plain text, ...) using cvs/svn > > whatever. > > You say that if we make a project in alioth we can have a wiki. Does > alioth have its own wiki or how do we set this up? Are there wiki > programs that automate dumping to docbook?
Just a note from a debian translator : Wikis are not generally very friendly in managing translations and content-negociation, and even less in tracking the freshness of translations. Is there some po-vcs-based wiki available ? Regards, -- Simon Paillard -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

