On Thu, 2 Sep 2004, Will Kamishlian wrote: > however, making a wiki look professional does require a lot of work out > of the box, and then maintaining/changing that presentation requires > contributors who are familiar with the wiki application base.
Typically, changing some CSS file or template is enough. I don't see where this is different from any CMS. > Maybe it's a question of the intended goal? My goal would be to create a > community of Jabber end-users. That's a different goal from providing > quick start information for end-users. If my goal were the latter, I > would *recommend* a wiki. On the other hand, I'll admit that the goal I > have in mind may be overly ambitious. I think I understand you a bit better now. However, I don't see how this can be done easily. Of course, one could simply set up a forum and hope that users will use it or some community will form. But even considered this succeeds, you'll eventually duplicate something which should normally happen using Jabber: People talking to each other ;-). A nice thing would certainly be something like a Jabber-powered forum which integrates chatrooms and a WWW-based forum, also emphasizing Jabber's strengths and flexibility this way. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to be any software around that implements this. Regards _______________________________________________ jdev mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://jabberstudio.org/mailman/listinfo/jdev