Hello all,

I went ahead and threw together a prototype wiki [1] of what I had envisioned 
in my original email about the project's Wiki. It's hosted on a personal copy 
of Confluence that I have running here on my workstation (which I keep on all 
day anyway).

Originally, I was just going to make the table of contents changes on the live 
wiki. I started buliding it on my laptop to make sure I got the formatting and 
content looking nice before unleashing it, and then I got a little carried away 
and just started creating pages obsessively to prevent any dead-end links. At 
that point I realized I had created quite a few pages, and did not just want to 
put them all up on the live wiki without consulting anyone, especially because 
I'm still new to the project.

I organized the wiki so that there would be a landing page [1] for the project, 
which would include basic information and link back to the homepage. Under the 
landing page for the project, it includes a landing page for each sample 
application [2] (currently only StockTrader if I am not mistaken) included in 
the project.

Under that would be a documentation page for each implementation [3] of the 
sample. I tried to follow the same organizational standard as was used in SVN. 
The landing page for each implementation would include information about the 
platform, the status of the implementation, and a link to an install guide.

Each sample application would also have a page for each of the components 
included within [4]. However, I stopped before reaching that point in my 
prototype, simply because I wanted to get feedback before going COMPLETELY 
overboard.

All that being said, does anyone have any thoughts about what is included 
within the prototype wiki, or about the layout, or the organization?

Should I post this content or any portion thereof on the actual wiki site that 
we have set up? Should I approach this differently?

Does anyone see any glaring technical inaccuracies that need to be resolved?

Thanks in advance! I hope this is received well, and was approached in the 
proper fashion.

- Nick

[1] http://remote.quicklearn.com:9090/display/sb/Home
[2] 
http://remote.quicklearn.com:9090/display/sb/Stonehenge+StockTrader+Sample+Application
[3] e.g., 
http://remote.quicklearn.com:9090/display/sb/Stonehenge+Metro+StockTrader+Documentation
[4] e.g., http://remote.quicklearn.com:9090/display/sb/StockTrader+Database


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