I haven't been on sourceforge for years. Seems there are lots of ads and it's not immediately obvious to me how to create a web page or use the wiki. I see a lot of OpenID projects are hosted on Google Code:
http://code.google.com/ On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 8:53 AM, Glen Peterson <[email protected]> wrote: > For the mailing list, why not use Google Groups? I've used that for > several other collaborations. It's free and easy to use and keeps > history. Also it does a nice job preventing spam and "out-of-office" > replies and is really easy to use. I think it also digitally signs > (DKIM) messages to aid delivery (so mails are not marked as spam). It > has good sign-up/leave tools as well and various permissions for how > public messages are and for hiding email addresses from the public: > > http://groups.google.com/ > > I don't know the history of this project, but I don't see Sourceforge > in your list of options for hosting. For any open source project, > they host free source control, a wiki, a bug tracking system, forums, > and a download section. I've used it to collaborate on other projects > and it worked great. > > http://sourceforge.net/create/ > > I'll gladly set up either one if people are interested. > > -- > Glen K. Peterson > (828) 393-0081 > > On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 1:26 AM, Jeremiah Benham > <[email protected]> wrote: >> On 02/19/2012 06:38 AM, Richard Shann wrote: >>> >>> Jeremiah >>> It seems that denemo.org is in a somewhat disabled state - we have >>> people trying to setup accounts and getting no email, and people unable >>> to view pages. >>> Are you able to look into this? >> >> I looked over the code on the server and scanned over the tiki >> documentation. The documentation demonstrates configuring the website >> through tiki itself. Unfortunately I don't see all the options so I can make >> any changes. I think we may have to do something like re-install the website >> have it point at the old database. The problem with having a website though >> send out email is that I would have to set up the server to use a MTA (Mail >> transport agent) like postfix or use smtp to have the mail relayed by >> another server. Most email providers will through our emails into the bulk >> or spam folder if we are not relayed by a reputable or white listed name. So >> this will take some work if that is really import for us to have a website >> that sends out emails to people. I think we need to think about the future >> of our website and what we truly need. I personally have never used the >> forum but maybe once. Then I forgot about it. I did not see any rss for the >> page so that I could be notified if there were changes made to the page. >> That would mean that people have to login to find out if anyone has written >> in the forum. If no one ever writes in the forum then they will quickly >> decide not to come back. We also have a facebook page that has its own news >> feed and members. So we have #irc, mailing list, denemo.org web forum, and >> facebook. I find this to be overwhelming. I can't keep up with all of that. >> Part of me says we should just create a highly simple website with >> minimalist features in git. Maybe we create a simple template in php or >> shell script. What do we need the website to do? Why would people go to it? >> Why would they want to comeback once they initially went to it? I would like >> to see documentation articles that contain youtube video demonstration on >> the documented features. Opinions anyone? >> >> Jeremiah >> >>> Richard >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Denemo-devel mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Denemo-devel mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel -- Glen K. Peterson (828) 393-0081 _______________________________________________ Denemo-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel
