Jan Steinman schrieb: > Although there is always room for improvement, it can be argued that > MediaWiki *is* a good design for what it was designed for! > > It's just that limiting visibility was not and is not important to the > designers. One should not design for things that are not specified nor > desired. That would be a bad design! :-) > > Gotta go now and put a sail on my Porche. I just can't believe those > arrogant German engineers, making it so hard to attach a sail to their > car! Must be poor design... > > I agree with several here who said that two or more wikis is the way > to go. When the page gets mature enough to share, a simple export/ > import script can make these perfected words of wisdom available to > the unwashed masses. Good designs for anarchy and consensus tend to > make poor designs for hierarchy and control.
I do not know why some people are so focused on defending the status quo. From the very beginning I started by explaining my understanding that MediaWiki hasn't been made for that, but starts to be used for that, and one can choose between (stubbornly) defending the status quo and opening an ear for the sound of the new. Neither MediaWiki nor its authors have invented the wiki as such, so I do not know what are you defending? Wikipedia is about serving people and if some of these people like MediaWiki because of that, and need a couple of features in order to make it usable in their environment, the spirit of serving should, at least, allow that, if not supporting it, which would be, in my opinion, the right approach. Your example with your Porsche is so far fetched, that I do not even want to comment on it. Anyway, I just found this - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Yurik and seems, thanks God, there are people in MediaWiki, who think about good design, and who obviously think the current design is not the best one can have. Iv _______________________________________________ MediaWiki-l mailing list [email protected] https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/mediawiki-l
