Daniel John Debrunner wrote:
Looking at Stan's WMD, sorry WWD document in DERBY-913 I want to promote
a holistic approach to making getting started on Derby easier. Thus by
improving various areas such as documentation, web-site, product,
tutorials, FAQ etc. together we can gain a bigger benefit than by
increasing individual items to make up for deficiencies in other areas.
The web site needs a huge overhaul. Here are some of the issues I've
been mulling over.
(1) Web site content isn't trivial to update
Whether the web site is in Forrest, Maven, or Anakia (those seem to be
the big three at Apache), it involves learning the file formats those
products support and the build process, and this learning curve is a
barrier.
We've had a much higher rate of contribution to the Derby Wiki.
I'd like to move as much of the highly changing information on the web
site to the Wiki as we can. For example, I think that all of
http://db.apache.org/derby/integrate/misc.html can be moved to the Wiki
-- and reorganized. Some is eclipsed by
http://wiki.apache.org/db-derby/UsesOfDerby anyhow, but there are
categories not handled by that Wiki page.
We'll have to strike some sort of balance, though. One issue with the
Wiki is *anyone* can update it. Anything that requires controlled
updates by committers must stay on the web site.
(2) New users can't easily find what they need
Too many responses to posts on derby-user consist of an URL to that
information on the web site (or, lately, even on the Wiki).
The good news is we have a lot more content than we did a year and half
ago. The bad news is I've pretty much just shovelled it in and some of
it's pretty tangled now.
Perhaps a master "Start Here" page would help that is specifically
tailored for new users. It could be on the web site or the Wiki, with a
prominent tab on the web site that goes directly to that page.
(3) It's hard to find the downloads
I'm surprised by the number of requests I get which are "where are the
downloads?" Even though downloads are on the home tab, they clearly
aren't visible. So make downloads its own tab?
The real estate of a web browser can accommodate only so many tabs, so
we have to choose carefully. I'm hoping to free up some time soon to
look more closely at each of these areas.
-jean