I've recently been using Arch linux and 90% of the appeal comes from
their awesome user-led wiki..
Something which we can gradually add to, build on camping of course,
and which hand-holds beginners would be ideal I think

On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 5:55 AM, Jenna Fox <[email protected]> wrote:
> Just thought it worth mentioning, we now collectively do own camping.io -
> this is where judofyr's site will go when it's ready, and we're planning to
> use github pages as hosting for now (yes, we won't be running it as a
> dynamic camping website, seeing as we can't think of any good dynamic
> functionality)
>
> Speaking of dynamic functionality. Do you guys remember the old ruby/rails
> beast forums? They kind of died out, but a really simple clean forum can be
> a really nice thing, and it send a clear message by being publicly readable
> - camping is not dead. You wouldn't need to join a mailing list to find that
> out. I've been thinking about forums a lot lately, and I
> think http://camendesign.com/nononsense_forum is a really great way to build
> a really simple forum - you use folders for sub forums, and rss or atom
> feeds for threads. This way you can subscribe to them also, and it has a
> built in API of sorts. Probably atom is the way to go. rss is a bit of a
> hack job.
>
> I'm really keen to kill this myth that camping is inactive. Another way I
> think we might do this is to bring in camping-related projects as well. In
> the same way rails is the home of active record, perhaps camping aught to be
> the home of things like mab.
>
>
> —
> Jenna Fox
>
>
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