I've started a new thread, because I think Rob Weir's very important point has 
got lost in the discussions about forums and lists. Rob wrote:

> Support is important. The question is
> how best to do it.  If all we're doing is considering the merits of
> different access methods to support, without looking at the
> implications of fragmenting the repositories and the resulting
> knowledge base, then we are doing a poor job at thinking this through.
> Remember the best support site is the one that allows the user to
> answer their own question, without signing up for a mailing list or
> posting to a forum. We should be looking at how we can prevent user
> support questions.

This ties in closely with end-user documentation and how it is delivered, so I 
am very interested in this topic. Later today I'll go through the archives of 
this list to find the earlier discussions, which I believe occurred while I was 
traveling and thus weren't given enough of my attention at the time. Or, have 
ideas and suggestions, perhaps examples of good practice, been posted to the 
wiki? Apple is IMO a brilliant example, but they have a lot of resources

It's clear to me that we need to do better than we have in the user support 
area, if we can do so. Not only will that benefit users and improve our 
reputation, it will allow us to work smarter, not harder. I will pursue this, 
along with other interested people. It's something valuable that I can do while 
the techies are moving websites and working with code etc.

Setting up a suitable system and populating it with suitable information will 
be a big task and take quite awhile, especially if we don't have enough skilled 
people to do it. (I'm referring to content, not infrastructure.) All the more 
reason to get started now with planning what we want to do, so we can start 
doing it ASAP. 

BTW, the Docs mailing list at OOo gets quite a few enquiries from people 
wanting to contribute, and a few of them sound like they have relevant 
experience and skills. I don't want to lose them. Yes, we point them to this 
list as well as ODFAuthors, but I don't know how many have actually joined. If 
we're actively discussing topics of interest to documenters, perhaps more 
people can be persuaded to get involved.

--Jean

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