That group is very valuable, but it shouldn't be considered a solution for this issue. The biggest complaint of Drupal is the "steep learning curve" and when you read those complaints you commonly see reference to the situation of multiple modules that provide the same basic features. Sure if someone is patient and has the time they can download all similar modules and see which one is the best for their situation, but who really has that time? Also you get the issue of modules that don't fully uninstall, leaving behind things like settings and sometimes tables, so you end up with artifacts in the database. (Though I got to admit, as someone who used to do a lot of work in PHPBB, the process with Drupal is a lot less painful. Nothing like spending hours copying and pasting in core changes to find out it wasn't exactly what you wanted)

As Shai pointed out, there is a good side to this. Sometimes modules start out as essential duplicates of other modules, but as they evolve they become something totally different and/or better. We shouldn't really discourage that as a community.

I also believe having the doc team keep up with all the modules and doing comparisons would be a very rough situation. I can only imagine going through and finding all the similar modules, documenting the similarities and differences between them, then once done one of those modules get updated with some new features and you got to go back and do it over.

I honestly don't think there will be a simple fix to this problem. At the heart, this issue falls under the umbrella of UX, so any solution should come with a lot of debate and ideas. The overall goal should be to make it as easy as possible for the Drupal noob to find the perfect module for their situation and not have to worry about testing multiple modules providing the same functionality.

Jamie Holly
http://www.intoxination.net http://www.hollyit.net



Zoltan Varady wrote:
You do know about the "Similar Module Review" group, right?

http://groups.drupal.org/similar-module-review

They review similar modules.

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