Hi Les, Thank you for popping in and offering to help.
While the community might occasionally seem quiet, do realize there is a very active team of core developers working to make Habari a top-notch application. Plugins and themes are readily available, and if there's a plugin which you need that doesn't already exist someone will very likely code it for you. However, it must be said that we do often fail to cater to the needs of entry users. We're working on addressing this in some ways (such as through a plugins directory), but would be happy to hear what other ideas you have. I must note that I don't envision Habari disappearing in any outcome. The core team actively uses it for many projects and therefore is dedicated to keeping it updated, though we might occasionally neglect other users out there. Best, Morgante On Dec 31, 2012, at 4:57 PM, Les Henderson <[email protected]> wrote: > Again, I didn't mean to offend anyone or imply the worst. I'm just giving > voice to my initial reactions as a potential user who would rather see things > improve than simply walk away. Clearly you want it to succeed as well, but it > helps to define and quantify what you mean by success. > > Just by comparison, I belong to a forum of tablet users for a brand that is > somewhat obscure. It now has over 2000 members and is very active, after just > a year. That's what I envision here, times five. Instead it's 500 with a few > posts a month. I'd also expect more than one person defending her honour. > Perhaps even an outright flame-fest. Ha. > > A few of the things that I felt were roadblocks were: > > - a requirement to join a group to ask questions. > - the assumption that I was familiar with setting up and running blogs.Not > everyone has run the Wordpress gauntlet. > - a confusing maze within the wiki which somehow made finding themes hard > - the belief that old themes would not work with new version > - the impression that few people currently support theme and plug-in dev. > - the impression that users know what github is > - github entries that give no description of what plug-in does > - no idea who the key people are since they deserve recognition > - links to sites using it appear dormant and unused > - warnings to not add themes since they would soon appear elsewhere but no > indication when > - no sense of upfront user community spirit (I'm sure you party working on > the back end) > > Again, just my impressions. My own site is currently crap so I shouldn't even > talk but there are good reasons for that. And yours isn't either. I think it > just needs more of a sense of community from the non-dev side of things is > all. > > > > On Monday, December 31, 2012 12:57:44 PM UTC-5, ringmaster wrote: > I don't see evidence that Habari is dying, or that some natural > selection has somehow made it too late for Habari to succeed. Of > course, my own idea of success for Habari has different criteria than > most people's. > > If there are particular shortfalls you'd like to highlight that might > engender adoption, this is the right place to discuss those. I don't > know what shortfalls you've discovered yet, so I can't help do > anything about them. > > If we need a separate venue for noob questions, and there's a tool we > can use to collect those better than what we have already, I'm anxious > to hear it. > > As far as a hoped direction for Habari to continue in, maybe you could > lead the rest of us with some thoughts of your own? > > Owen > > -- > To post to this group, send email to [email protected] > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > [email protected] > For more options, visit this group at > http://groups.google.com/group/habari-users -- To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/habari-users
