It would be great if we could avoid breaking URLs that many people may have bookmarked already, especially in an 'nl_code' group.
Perhaps the subdomains can be mapped to wiki sections, making for easy maintenance, but that might not get them all. There's also (non-)relative-linking among pages of the site to discover and deal with. - Dennis Another one for your sig collection: "Those who abstain from smoking, drink, and loose living don't live longer. It just feels that way." -----Original Message----- From: Kay Schenk [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Sunday, August 07, 2011 15:54 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: Request for comments: Community Wiki Services web page. On 08/07/2011 03:38 PM, Terry Ellison wrote: > I've just finished a 1st cut of outstanding tasks and issues for the Wiki. > > See > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/Community+Wiki+Services > > > Comments gratefully received on this DL and/or on the page itself. OK, I'll be the first to add to this. I suggested some time back, and given the technical details we'll be faced with in migrating a large portion of the current OOo web site to the Apache web architecture, I strongly suggest that all the native language projects front-facing pages be migrated to the "new" wiki. I don't know what any of them would think about this, but I truly feel this will make life easier for them in the long run. Given what some have on their existing web sites, I'm pretty sure migration to the wiki would entail far less time for them, and enable more convenient updating as well. Some, if you look at the current OO.o wiki home page, some languages already have a presence on the current wiki. This would of course, give them URLS of the form somewikiname.openoffice.org/"nl_code" rather than "nl_code".openoffice.org but I have a feeling such a change would be ok. Naturally, we should confirm acceptance with them for this. > > Thanks Terry -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MzK "Those who love deeply never grow old; they may die of old age, but they die young." -- Sir Arthur Pinero
