Hi Peter and all,

We have developed a feature into Calenco (https://www.calenco.com) based
on http://annotatorjs.org/ that allows anyone to comment on a Web
version of the source file. Comments are stored server side.
Then the technical writer have access to the same page with a list of
all comments, who wrote it, etc.
Do not hesitate if you need further information.

Have a nice day,

Camille.

Le 23/10/2018 à 18:53, Peter Desjardins a écrit :
> Hi! Does anyone have a document content review process you can
> recommend? One that allows non-DocBook users to easily provide input
> and see each other's comments?
>
> My team uses Google docs for content review because reviewers can
> comment easily and see each other's input (this is at a company that
> uses Google email/docs). It's error-prone and tedious to transform
> DocBook content to Google documents though. I would love to find a
> better solution.
>
> We keep content in GitHub and I love the pull request content review
> tools there. Most of our subject matter experts do not use GitHub
> though, and it's not practical to review all DocBook content by
> reading the source XML.
>
> The conversion to Google doc format that works the best for us (so
> far) is DocBook > HTML > LibreOffice OpenDocument > Upload to Google
> drive and convert to Google doc format. We lose important formatting
> like bold for guilabel elements and bullet characters for
> itemizedlists disappear. Preparing a document for review is painful.
>
> Do you have a great DocBook-based review process?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Peter
>
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