Carol Willing added the comment:

David, I love the three paragraph intro. It captures the essence of the dev 
guide usage from newcomers to the project to experienced core devs. I really 
like the second paragraph and how it suggests focusing on the issue at hand. 
Thanks, and I will take these three suggested paragraphs and rework the patch.

I'll use the three paragraphs as an intro, circular file the quickstart, and 
rework some of the remaining content into its own section(s).

I respect how you like a quality Table of Contents when looking for 
information. Alternatively, other folks use search extensively to find 
information, and search gives a different, less linear walk through the 
document. So I think it is reasonable to err on the side of a quality 
uncluttered Table of Contents.

However, I also do think that those that are new to the project are looking for 
a bit more guidance. Though I concur that the guidance does not need to be in a 
quickstart; though it should be in an easily discoverable place.  Quickstarts 
are common on other open source projects so new contributors will likely look 
for one (or something similar). What new contributors are looking for are brief 
pathways (i.e. a few steps toward productivity) specific to documentation, 
testing, issue triaging, etc. Whether called pathways or a quickstart isn't 
critical, what is important is guiding those that need more assistance and 
those that don't have the time privilege to read the devguide in its entirety.

Thanks for the suggestions. I'll make another pass at it. :D

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