I'm sure if I thought about it longer I would find some more
arguments.
I have one to add: You need a graphical desktop in order to deal with
the web forum because 'browsing' this forum with Lynx is a PITA (this
is one of the rare occasions that I use this acronym ;-)
Agreed, and this is
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Jon Stockill wrote:
Alex Perry wrote:
I know our development culture is built around mailing lists. I'm sure the
FlightGear community will be decisively split between forums versus mailing
lists if I ask people's preferences ... so I'm not
From: Curtis Olson
Now that I am hosting the FlightGear web site with a commercial hosting
service, it becomes quite easy to setup online forums using phpBB2.
I know our development culture is built around mailing lists. I'm sure the
FlightGear community will be decisively split
I don't really care about which form is used for user support.
If passers-by prefer a web-based forum, then this *may* be the
better choice. (But also consider that someone has to do the
support. These are to a certain degree developers, so even here
it's not unimportant what those prefer. Unless
Melchior FRANZ wrote:
I'm sure if I thought about it longer I would find some more
arguments.
I have one to add: You need a graphical desktop in order to deal with
the web forum because 'browsing' this forum with Lynx is a PITA (this
is one of the rare occasions that I use this acronym ;-)
+1 for users forum
-1000 for developers forum
just my 0.01 cents.
On 11/30/06, Martin Spott [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Melchior FRANZ wrote:
I'm sure if I thought about it longer I would find some more
arguments.
I have one to add: You need a graphical desktop in order to deal with
the
* Curtis Olson -- Wednesday 29 November 2006 05:24:
I know our development culture is built around mailing lists.
Exactly. I can't imagine to take part in forum based development.
Is this anything that is worth exploring?
No.
Is it worth having both options available?
Not that I knew.
--- Curtis Olson wrote:
Now that I am hosting the FlightGear web site with a commercial hosting
service, it becomes quite easy to setup online forums using phpBB2.
I know our development culture is built around mailing lists. I'm sure
the
FlightGear community will be decisively split between
Stuart Buchanan wrote:
So, my tuppence worth:
- Have a structure user forum, and possibly wind down the -user list in
the future.
I'd disagree - if anything you should create another mailing list to
gate the forum messages to.
--
Jon Stockill
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
For FlightGear developers.
I think a good idea keep development discussions into mailing lists, because
this way is driven to developers only.
Maybe with a forum, questions with no relevance, help developers give no
focus to important development questions.
For end users
For end users, forum
Curtis Olson wrote:
On 11/28/06, Ron Jensen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And this is the biggest argument against forums. They're only
accessable when the server is up
This is similar with email lists ... you can only post and receive postings
when the list server is running and configured
Jon Stockill wrote:
Stuart Buchanan wrote:
So, my tuppence worth:
- Have a structure user forum, and possibly wind down the -user list in
the future.
I'd disagree - if anything you should create another mailing list to
gate the forum messages to.
Of course, at some point in the future
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 09:27:29 -0800, Alex wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I know our development culture is built around mailing lists. I'm
sure the FlightGear community will be decisively split between
forums versus mailing lists if I ask people's preferences ... so I'm
not
Hi Curt,
I prefer the mailing list. I think there are much tot little
contributions for splitting the topics in a forum (how many contributors
we have?). Up to now it's no problem to have the survey of all
contributions. If someone prefer the thread-sorted view: we have it on
On Wednesday 29 November 2006 13:29, Arnt Karlsen wrote:
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 09:27:29 -0800, Alex wrote in message
I'd also hate to look in two places. On the other hand, changing how
we present the mailing list archives so they look like a forum _and_
allow replying if you have logged
On 11/29/06, Ampere K. Hardraade wrote:
On Wednesday 29 November 2006 13:29, Arnt Karlsen wrote:
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 09:27:29 -0800, Alex wrote in message
I'd also hate to look in two places. On the other hand, changing how
we present the mailing list archives so they look like a forum
Curt wrote:
I just realize I have said absolutely nothing. :-)
I think I'm going to let them run just a bit longer and then maybe we can
an idea if enough people think they are useful and are using them.
If the community is split into two different camps, communication is going
to suffer,
On 11/29/06, Jon S. Berndt wrote:
If the community is split into two different camps, communication is going
to suffer, plain and simple. I can receive email wherever I am and reply or
not. I can set up filters and rules in my email program to sort the email
posts. If the mails to the
On 11/29/06, Jon S. Berndt wrote:
If the community is split into two different camps, communication is
going to suffer, plain and simple. I can receive email wherever I am and
reply or not. I can set up filters and rules in my email program to sort
the email posts. If the mails to the
Jon S. Berndt wrote:
On 11/29/06, *Jon S. Berndt* wrote:
If the community is split into two different camps,
communication is going to suffer, plain and simple. I can
receive email wherever I am and reply or not. I can set up
filters and rules in my email
Hi,
On Wednesday 29 November 2006 05:24, Curtis Olson wrote:
Now that I am hosting the FlightGear web site with a commercial hosting
service, it becomes quite easy to setup online forums using phpBB2.
I know our development culture is built around mailing lists. I'm sure the
FlightGear
On Thursday 30 November 2006 06:20, Jon S. Berndt wrote:
Curt wrote:
I just realize I have said absolutely nothing. :-)
I think I'm going to let them run just a bit longer and then maybe we can
an idea if enough people think they are useful and are using them.
If the community is
On Wednesday 29 November 2006 14:48, Josh Babcock wrote:
Curtis Olson wrote:
On 11/28/06, Ron Jensen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And this is the biggest argument against forums. They're only
accessable when the server is up
This is similar with email lists ... you can only post and
Curtis Olson wrote:
Now that I am hosting the FlightGear web site with a commercial
hosting service, it becomes quite easy to setup online forums using
phpBB2.
I know our development culture is built around mailing lists. I'm
sure the FlightGear community will be decisively split
I'm just fiddling around and anything can be changed, but here is a first
whack.
http://www.flightgear.org/forums/
As Dave said we can setup any structure of categories and forums. Right now
I've created one category with all the forum topics inside, but we could
certainly split things out
And I'm a moron and just wiped out the whole thing 2 seconds ago. Let me
try again ... thanks for your patience ... :-(
Curt.
On 11/28/06, Curtis Olson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm just fiddling around and anything can be changed, but here is a first
whack.
A backup communication method might be good, but I'm not keen at
all on the idea of having to look two places for the same kind of
content. My feeling is that it should be one or the other.
Agreed. I think a forum has advantages over say a mailing list. But
then having both might
On Tue, 2006-11-28 at 23:01 -0600, Curtis Olson wrote:
And I'm a moron and just wiped out the whole thing 2 seconds ago. Let
me try again ... thanks for your patience ... :-(
Curt.
And this is the biggest argument against forums. They're only
accessable when the server is up and its
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 16:29:05 +1100, Pigeon wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
A backup communication method might be good, but I'm not keen at
all on the idea of having to look two places for the same kind of
content. My feeling is that it should be one or the other.
On 11/28/06, Ron Jensen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And this is the biggest argument against forums. They're only
accessable when the server is up
This is similar with email lists ... you can only post and receive postings
when the list server is running and configured correctly, and
Curtis Olson wrote:
On 11/28/06, *Ron Jensen* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And this is the biggest argument against forums. They're only
accessable when the server is up
This is similar with email lists ... you can only post and receive
postings when the
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