Forgive me if this is the wrong destination for this proposal... I am proposing the idea that all documentation for KDE projects and on all KDE websites include links to provide online feedback on that documentation.
At a minimum, it will very useful to see at the bottom of each page: -- Was this information helpful? -- Yes -- No Many other sites do this now... but we should also do the following if the user clicks on No: -- Please tell us what was wrong with the documentation: -- It was not thorough -- It did not apply to me -- It is outdated -- It was inaccurate -- -- If you like, you can provide additional feedback by clicking here: -- [Link to feedback form online] This should apply to any documentation saved in the docbook format, also websites like this: http://women.kde.org/articles/tutorials/kdevelop3/ I'm not sure if that webpage was translated from DocBook, nonetheless it should allow feedback. The feedback form online would link somewhere like; http://www.kde.org/documentation/feedbackform.php?document=0103983 Internet conectivity, what if they don't have it? When the user clicks on yes or no, or subsequenly "It was not thorough", etc, there should be a background process that "queues up" these responses. This daemon will save the response data to a file. The next time there is internet connectivity, it should use curl or something and request URL's like: http://www.kde.org/documentation/feedback.php?document=0103983&response=4 Do you think this method provide valuable feedback for the documentation project? Do you think this would be technically feasible to implement? Thanks for keeping KDE user-friendly, Will Entriken
