Am 07.01.2011 um 18:34 schrieb Banlu Kemiyatorn: > 2011/1/8 Dr. H. Nikolaus Schaller <[email protected]>: >> Hi, >> GNUstep is such a mature project that every idea is already implemented at >> least once (and sometimes not very good). There is not only the Software >> Index >> but a Application Wiki. Please see here: >> >> http://wiki.gnustep.org/index.php/Category:Applications >> >> So we have different solutions for different requirement priorities. A wiki >> is good for >> collaborative editing while a dedicated tool like SWI is better in keeping >> things >> well structured. > > I agree that a dedicated tool is better for keeping things well > structured. But IMHO it's better to keep the community structured > along as well. Departing the tool from people may not improve the > overall community's structure or at least it isn't giving them enough > freedom to decide. > >> >> Am 07.01.2011 um 17:59 schrieb Banlu Kemiyatorn: >> >>> On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Ivan Vučica <[email protected]> wrote: >>>> On the other hand, having specialized software means tight control over >>>> form >>>> over resulting displayed page; every page will look the same, and hence >>>> mean >>>> the entire database is easier to browse. >>>> Wiki-templates are not a solution :-) >>> >>> Why using wiki template didn't allow every page to look the same? >>> And if it really is the case, Wiki bot would easily do the job. >> >> Maybe, you can set up some bot that reads out the Software Index and updates >> the Application Wiki? >> >> Nikolaus > > Good idea! Especially for anyone who want to edit wiki.gnustep.org, > which AFAIK, was locked by some maintainers who weren't be able to > deal with spammers and want to keep it for a certain group of people. > While I don't blame them in anyway I also don't agree this philosophy. > In my opinion, if you can't maintain an open wiki for an open > community you better just use any banner-sacrificed service. So for > this reasoning process, I personally decided as an individual that I > must politically not edit it.
I don't know that it was locked and I have write access for a long time. As far as I know there simply weren't enough people who were interested in editing the existing wiki. Therefore, there also weren't enough for cleaning a completely open wiki from spam. IMHO it is not something political, is just a critical mass issue. If a community is over some critical mass, you can run the Wiki openly and find people to clean it. If not, you have to restrict access by a registration process or the work already invested will be lost. In the last years the GNUstep community was small and only did grow in the past two years. Maybe, you could come to FOSDEM and lead a discussion how to improve the structure and useage of the GNUstep wiki in the devroom? Nikolaus _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnustep mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnustep
