On Wed, 2011-08-24 at 09:05 +1000, Jean Weber wrote:
> 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.


Hi Jean,

Before I let another thread slide away from view - I agree completely
with approaching this with a unified view of user support, not just
stove pipes for different delivery vehicles.

//drew

Reply via email to