2009/3/11 Ben Klein <[email protected]>: > 2009/3/12 David Gerard <[email protected]>:
>> Reasons for picking Moin are typically: >> Reasons for picking MediaWiki are typically: > Moin is sounding better to me so far. Less overhead is good. > Generally, people pick a Wiki that Just Works (TM). Unfortunately, > they pretty much all do, so there's no absolute "this is better". The > existence of so many different Wiki systems is testament to that. Well, yeah. Has anyone given a good reason to move from Moin? I can read the wiki and write stuff in it OK. >> I did a move at work from Moin to MediaWiki, on the intranet wiki ten >> of us use all day every day. Our reason was that our Moin wiki was >> just somehow not as usable as we wanted from a wiki, so we gave >> MediaWiki a go and it was good enough to bother moving engines. Also, >> the Moin wiki was full of outdated rubbish, so this was a handy excuse >> to start over. > "somehow not as usable" isn't a strong argument either. Specifically > what issues do you have with Moin, and are they present on > wiki.winehq.org? None. You appear to be reading something that I didn't write. >>> Number of new users is not necessarily proportional to number of new >>> spammers. Do we actually have a problem with spam on the Wiki? >> If there is, I'll hereby put my hand up to help. > You were implying that there IS a problem with spammers. I see a > request elsewhere on wine-devel to have an IP blocked, so that's one > spammer out of how many new users? Er, I didn't state that wiki.winehq.org has a problem with spammers - I asked if there was, *in the text you actually quoted*. Again, you appear to be reading things I didn't write at all, even while quoting what I did. Your communications are confusing, please make them less so. - d.
