I think we need to pay attention to the overall organization of wiki
pages.  For example, there are a zillion Bayes pages with overlapping
information and not much organization.

    * BayesAccuracy
    * BayesBitMe
    * BayesFaq
    * BayesFeedbackViaForwarding
    * BayesInSpamAssassin
    * BayesNotWorking
    * BayesUpgradeError
    * SiteWideBayesFeedback
    * SiteWideBayesSetup
    * SitewidePostfixBayes 
    * AutolearningNotWorking
    * FixingBadLearning
    * LearningMarkedUpMessages
    * UsingAnAccountForLearning 

In addition, there's not quite enough design in terms of the high-level
organization.  I'm wondering if we shouldn't try to structure most of
the documentation in terms of areas (in terms of how users think of
things, generally) and then documents like the FAQ and the problem
solving stuff point into those documents.

Anyway, just thinking out loud here.  :-)

Daniel

-- 
Daniel Quinlan                     ApacheCon! 13-17 November (3 SpamAssassin
http://www.pathname.com/~quinlan/  http://www.apachecon.com/  sessions & more)

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