Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-08 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 3:20 PM, Ralph Angenendt
 wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 8:53 PM, R P Herrold  wrote:
>> By carrying two wiki, we avoid that workload, and can have a
>> self-serve model for getting commits in the 'projects.' one,
>> and the moderated approach on the vetted one.
>
> Bleh. And I mean really Bleh. Putting documentation into two different
> places absolutely sucks.

Okay, we already do that with the docs we scrape from somewhere else,
but that doesn't make it better in my view.

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-08 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 9:45 PM, Brian Mathis
 wrote:
> 2) Follow the currently more popular "community" model that is in use
> in other OSS projects.  That means the wiki is generally open to
> anyone with an account.  This model would yield a larger community of
> people willing to contribute, at the cost of potentially lower quality
> content (however, I don't not believe that will actually be the case).
>  This model would be a shift in approach from where the project
> currently seems to be focused.

That's why I asked some questions a few mails ago which nobody has
even tried to answer yet :)

As said, I'm torn between both models. Model 1 has some advantages
where I'd like to be convinced that we can also get that with with
model 2.

> The model for #2 has an escape valve, which is that all of the messy
> "community stuff" can happen in the wiki, while the "official" stuff
> that has been discussed here would live on the actual centos web site
> outside of the wiki.

That already is the case ("official" Documentation is there).

Cheers,

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-08 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 8:53 PM, R P Herrold  wrote:
> By carrying two wiki, we avoid that workload, and can have a
> self-serve model for getting commits in the 'projects.' one,
> and the moderated approach on the vetted one.

Bleh. And I mean really Bleh. Putting documentation into two different
places absolutely sucks.

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-07 Thread Marcus Moeller
Dear Russ,

> The second approach sounds like more of a slam than living in
> a 'projects.' sub-domain to me.
>
> A refactoring of the personal homepages will have to happen in
> any event, and perhaps we should simply have a './personal/'
> in the main wiki and move all such into it ... but this then
> carries the expense of refactoring all the 'at the ./' point
> documentary narrative down a level as well.  ACL errors will
> be harder to avoid as well
>
> By carrying two wiki, we avoid that workload, and can have a
> self-serve model for getting commits in the 'projects.' one,
> and the moderated approach on the vetted one.

Which means that there will possibly more than one documentation per
task, e.g. there could be a KVM tutorial in the moderated and one in
the 'open' wiki space.

If the quality of an article in the 'open' wiki is good enough, who
ports/merges it to the moderated one?

Sounds quite odd to me, sorry.

But I agree that the content of the current CMS/XOOPS and parts of the
wiki could also be handled through the wiki with strict ACLs. Maybe
centos.org could link to these sites and centos.org/contrib could act
as place for user/developer contributed documentation which then
should be as open as possible.

Access to the contrib sites should be granted after agreeing to the CC
license, without the need to discuss changes/contributions on the ML.
We could add a disclaimer to the contrib pages, too.

Best Regards
Marcus
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-06 Thread Brian Mathis
On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 2:53 PM, R P Herrold  wrote:
> On Tue, 6 Oct 2009, Ed Heron wrote:
>
>>  It appears that the people who are preferring the more restricted content
>> guidelines are saying they will accept content separation.  But having 2
>> separate content systems seems redundant.  Is there a way to have a section
>> (directory) of the wiki that is core and an expanded section?  This might
>> satisfy both sides?
>
> Goodness -- wiki.centos.org and wiki.projects.centos.org is
> too hard or better somehow than wiki.centos.org and
> wiki.centos.org/projects/ where './projects' content carries a
> 'this content is not as carefully vetted' disclaimer?
>
> The second approach sounds like more of a slam than living in
> a 'projects.' sub-domain to me.
>
> A refactoring of the personal homepages will have to happen in
> any event, and perhaps we should simply have a './personal/'
> in the main wiki and move all such into it ... but this then
> carries the expense of refactoring all the 'at the ./' point
> documentary narrative down a level as well.  ACL errors will
> be harder to avoid as well
>
> By carrying two wiki, we avoid that workload, and can have a
> self-serve model for getting commits in the 'projects.' one,
> and the moderated approach on the vetted one.
>
> My $0.02
>
> -- Russ herrold


All of this debate is dancing around the real issue, and that issue is
how the project defines itself.  That definition should be arrived at
by both the project maintainers and also the community of users.  The
way I see it, there are 2 main choices:

1) Run the project with a 1-way push model where all the participants
are vetted and push out software, documentation, etc... out to all of
the users.  This places all of the burden on the project maintainers,
but the end result is potentially higher quality documentation and
product.  This seems to be the general model followed right now.  One
cannot really contribute until going through the approval process, but
you make sure that each page has an owner and and the quality is
(theoretically) better.

2) Follow the currently more popular "community" model that is in use
in other OSS projects.  That means the wiki is generally open to
anyone with an account.  This model would yield a larger community of
people willing to contribute, at the cost of potentially lower quality
content (however, I don't not believe that will actually be the case).
 This model would be a shift in approach from where the project
currently seems to be focused.


The model for #2 has an escape valve, which is that all of the messy
"community stuff" can happen in the wiki, while the "official" stuff
that has been discussed here would live on the actual centos web site
outside of the wiki.  If you just so happen to use wiki software to
run that "official" part of the web site, then that should not be
called "the wiki".
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-06 Thread Ed Heron
From: "Ralph Angenendt", Tuesday, October 06, 2009 7:22 AM

>On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 7:05 PM, Ed Heron  wrote:
>> From my point of view, the process wasn't onerous in itself. The only
>> issues I had/have are the sparse guidelines of acceptable content and the
>> voracity of the reaction, by some, to what they viewed as unacceptable
>> content. It appears there are multiple standards for content.

>This is true. While I'm for rather more content (as long as quality
>doesn't go down) others have a different view of that. And I think we
>have to find some common ground here.

  It appears that the people who are preferring the more restricted content 
guidelines are saying they will accept content separation.  But having 2 
separate content systems seems redundant.  Is there a way to have a section 
(directory) of the wiki that is core and an expanded section?  This might 
satisfy both sides?

>> For aspiring content producers that suggest modification to existing
>> content, those changes should go through the page's creator or maintainer 
>> or
>> someone else in the edit group. If they describe the changes on this 
>> list,
>> it should be a simple matter for someone else to implement or possibly 
>> give
>> them access to that page. Once those people have sufficient history, I
>> assume adding them to the edit group so they can make changes directly 
>> would
>> follow.

>This is roughly how it is working at the moment, if I didn't misunderstand 
>you.

  I'm summarizing intentionally.  I don't think there is anything wrong with 
the current process.  Being a recent addition to the 'edit group', even 
though it took some time to get there, it wasn't too bad.  A little patience 
was all I really needed.  Opening up the content to the public could put a 
rather large burden on the existing admin/edit group.  Going through the 
current process should result in greater longevity of contributors compared 
to instant edit access.  Making edit access easier for people 'passing 
through' could result in more orphaned content.

  The only thing that comes to mind is possibly allowing someone to edit a 
page without committing the changes.  These could be the equivalent of 
submitted patches pending approval.

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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-06 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 7:05 PM, Ed Heron  wrote:
>  From my point of view, the process wasn't onerous in itself.  The only
> issues I had/have are the sparse guidelines of acceptable content and the
> voracity of the reaction, by some, to what they viewed as unacceptable
> content.  It appears there are multiple standards for content.

This is true. While I'm for rather more content (as long as quality
doesn't go down) others have a different view of that. And I think we
have to find some common ground here.

>  For aspiring content producers that suggest modification to existing
> content, those changes should go through the page's creator or maintainer or
> someone else in the edit group.  If they describe the changes on this list,
> it should be a simple matter for someone else to implement or possibly give
> them access to that page.  Once those people have sufficient history, I
> assume adding them to the edit group so they can make changes directly would
> follow.

This is roughly how it is working at the moment, if I didn't misunderstand you.

Cheers,

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-05 Thread Ed Heron
From: "Ralph Angenendt", Monday, October 05, 2009 9:54 AM

>...
>Okay, than I did misunderstand that. Mind, that I'm not native speaker 
>either.
>
>Then *everybody* please be not vague:

  I think my last post might have fallen in to the vague category...

  I was trying to say that as one of those new members, I was trying to ease 
into the job.

  New members are being added...

>How would openness work in your view
>
>a) without compromising the wiki's spam-free-ness (?)
>b) with making people adhere to a CC license beforehand
>c) with making sure that the content quality doesn't get worse (I
>think we have a rather high quality at the moment)
>d) with making sure that there's no "off topic" content
>
>I'd really be interested to hear that. I have a view how that can
>work, but that is a view which still makes some people "better" than
>other people - and will create more work for them.
>
>I know we had that discussion about a year and a half ago, and I have
>some ideas - but the result from last year was, that there would be
>around 5 to 6 people who watch over the content. I think that that
>isn't enough.
>...

  From my point of view, the process wasn't onerous in itself.  The only 
issues I had/have are the sparse guidelines of acceptable content and the 
voracity of the reaction, by some, to what they viewed as unacceptable 
content.  It appears there are multiple standards for content.

  I don't have a problem with easing people into the 'trusted' position of 
the edit group.  It is already possible to get a user account and access to 
create a user page with little 'qualification'.  For new conttibutors, this 
provides a sandbox to both say something about themselves and produce 
content, or spam.

  For aspiring content producers that suggest modification to existing 
content, those changes should go through the page's creator or maintainer or 
someone else in the edit group.  If they describe the changes on this list, 
it should be a simple matter for someone else to implement or possibly give 
them access to that page.  Once those people have sufficient history, I 
assume adding them to the edit group so they can make changes directly would 
follow.

  The only people excluded by the current process are the impatient.  This 
is a long-term project.  Impatience is for more transitory media, like 
on-line chat and lists/forums.  The world isn't going to end if a page isn't 
updated or access isn't granted for a few days.

 

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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-05 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 3:02 PM, Phil Schaffner
 wrote:
> Ralph Angenendt wrote on 10/05/2009 04:40 AM:
>> Um. Since when does it, when you want to make a fix? As said, there
>> are around 80 people who already are able to fix things all over the
>> place. Which does not require to send a mail anywhere, but just making
>> a fix.
>
> I seem to recall someone pointing out that few of those 80 are active.
> Why not bring in some fresh blood and new energy?  If 80 have the
> privilege why not 85 or 100?  If the view is that there are too many
> open accounts with global edit rights, then restrict those that have not
> contributed in X years, but lower the barriers to entry for new
> contributors.

I am adding new users to that on a permanent basis - normally you are
on there after you created your second article or have had some
interesting suggestions on here.

> Dag's point that more openness could be a good thing seems pretty
> clear to me.

Okay, than I did misunderstand that. Mind, that I'm not native speaker either.

Then *everybody* please be not vague:

How would openness work in your view

a) without compromising the wiki's spam-free-ness (?)
b) with making people adhere to a CC license beforehand
c) with making sure that the content quality doesn't get worse (I
think we have a rather high quality at the moment)
d) with making sure that there's no "off topic" content

I'd really be interested to hear that. I have a view how that can
work, but that is a view which still makes some people "better" than
other people - and will create more work for them.

I know we had that discussion about a year and a half ago, and I have
some ideas - but the result from last year was, that there would be
around 5 to 6 people who watch over the content. I think that that
isn't enough.

Convince me (and possibly others, but if I'm convinced I'll push that
further) =:)

Cheers,

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-05 Thread Phil Schaffner
Ralph Angenendt wrote on 10/05/2009 04:40 AM:
> On Sat, Oct 3, 2009 at 8:36 AM, Dag Wieers  wrote:
>> On Fri, 2 Oct 2009, Ralph Angenendt wrote:
>> Could it be that entry to collaborate is not low enough to make it work ? If
>> you have too many rules, people might be afraid/unable to make the necessary
>> fix. Especially if it requires sending a mail and decision by committee.
> 
> Um. Since when does it, when you want to make a fix? As said, there
> are around 80 people who already are able to fix things all over the
> place. Which does not require to send a mail anywhere, but just making
> a fix.

I seem to recall someone pointing out that few of those 80 are active. 
Why not bring in some fresh blood and new energy?  If 80 have the 
privilege why not 85 or 100?  If the view is that there are too many 
open accounts with global edit rights, then restrict those that have not 
contributed in X years, but lower the barriers to entry for new 
contributors.

>> My worries are that you are taking something for granted that is caused by
>> the current rules, to keep those rules in place.
> 
> Can you be a bit more vague?

I think you may be confusing vagueness with a bit of a language barrier. 
  We can't all be native English speakers, and email (Wiki, Forum, ...) 
communication is hard enough when everybody's first language is the 
same.  Dag's point that more openness could be a good thing seems pretty 
clear to me.

Phil
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-05 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Sat, Oct 3, 2009 at 8:36 AM, Dag Wieers  wrote:
> On Fri, 2 Oct 2009, Ralph Angenendt wrote:
>>
> Could it be that entry to collaborate is not low enough to make it work ? If
> you have too many rules, people might be afraid/unable to make the necessary
> fix. Especially if it requires sending a mail and decision by committee.

Um. Since when does it, when you want to make a fix? As said, there
are around 80 people who already are able to fix things all over the
place. Which does not require to send a mail anywhere, but just making
a fix.

> My worries are that you are taking something for granted that is caused by
> the current rules, to keep those rules in place.

Can you be a bit more vague?

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-03 Thread Richard Bronosky
On Sat, Oct 3, 2009 at 2:36 AM, Dag Wieers  wrote:
> Could it be that entry to collaborate is not low enough to make it work ? If
> you have too many rules, people might be afraid/unable to make the necessary
> fix. Especially if it requires sending a mail and decision by committee.
>
> My worries are that you are taking something for granted that is caused by
> the current rules, to keep those rules in place.

I, for one, requested permission to edit a page, but by the time it
was granted I had forgotten what I wanted to do. I understand that
administering a community and protecting content is a challenge. I
sympathize, even empathize. But, it is true that current culture
limits growth.


-- 
.!# RichardBronosky #!.
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-02 Thread Dag Wieers

On Fri, 2 Oct 2009, Ralph Angenendt wrote:


On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 10:33 PM, Brian Mathis
 wrote:


What you currently have is the "lock model", and with few admins the
idea of opening up the system seems like a bad one because those
admins will need to deal with all those errors, but this is not the
case.  As soon as it's open, you'll have more people monitoring and
more people who can fix errors as they are introduced.


We already have > 70 people who would be able to do so (no idea how
many of these accounts are still in use). Do I see those going over
pages? Rarely, it's nearly always the same persons.


Could it be that entry to collaborate is not low enough to make it work ? 
If you have too many rules, people might be afraid/unable to make the 
necessary fix. Especially if it requires sending a mail and decision by 
committee.


My worries are that you are taking something for granted that is caused by 
the current rules, to keep those rules in place.


--
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-02 Thread Ed Heron
From: "Ralph Angenendt", Friday, October 02, 2009 6:11 AM

>We already have > 70 people who would be able to do so (no idea how
>many of these accounts are still in use). Do I see those going over
>pages? Rarely, it's nearly always the same persons.

  I'm OK with helping to update/maintain the wiki.  I've made a couple of 
minor changes and  I started on a revision of the PXE stuff.  Since much of 
the PXE articles are not core, but a generic discussion of how to configure 
it and related software, I'm interested in the result of this discussion.

  In general, I'm asking myself, "How deep do I jump in and how fast?"  I 
don't want to step on toes or take articles in non-intended directions.  I 
certainly don't want to create work for others if my changes aren't desired 
by forcing admins to roll back my changes.  Or, would you rather I made the 
changes I think need to be made, attempt to describe them in the space 
provided and allow others to censure me if I wander or mangle?

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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-02 Thread PJ Welsh
>> +1
>
> -20

This continuing drama is beginning to remind me of the Miller "Great taste,
less filling" commercials of old (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller_Lite)...
It's the same damn beer/CentOS people! ;) [?]
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-02 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Fri, Oct 2, 2009 at 8:13 AM, Will Fitch  wrote:
>> Dear Russ.
>
>> It's not about creating problems but finding solutions. If no one has
>> the right to fix errors in articles and if every minor change has to
>> be discussed over and over again on the ML, it's the dead of a vital
>> wiki.
>
>> Then you need a CMS instead, call it docs.centos.org and leave the
>> community alone at 'projects.centos.org/community'
>
> +1

-20

Creating diversity is not always a good thing. In this case it really isn't.

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-02 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Fri, Oct 2, 2009 at 8:17 AM, Marcus Moeller  wrote:

> It's not about creating problems but finding solutions. If no one has
> the right to fix errors in articles

There are around 80 people who have that right *right now*.

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-02 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 10:33 PM, Brian Mathis
 wrote:

> What you currently have is the "lock model", and with few admins the
> idea of opening up the system seems like a bad one because those
> admins will need to deal with all those errors, but this is not the
> case.  As soon as it's open, you'll have more people monitoring and
> more people who can fix errors as they are introduced.

We already have > 70 people who would be able to do so (no idea how
many of these accounts are still in use). Do I see those going over
pages? Rarely, it's nearly always the same persons.

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Will Fitch
> Dear Russ.

> It's not about creating problems but finding solutions. If no one has
> the right to fix errors in articles and if every minor change has to
> be discussed over and over again on the ML, it's the dead of a vital
> wiki.

> Then you need a CMS instead, call it docs.centos.org and leave the
> community alone at 'projects.centos.org/community'

+1
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Marcus Moeller
Dear Russ.

>> Why not granting Edit rights (and I mean full Edit Group Access) to
>> anyone who has already contributed good stuff.
>>
>> Then there should be something like a Wiki Admin group which will
>> track changes and correct them || start discussion on the MLs if
>> necessary.
>
> because creating a problem and fixing it ex post is harder
> than not creating it in the first place

It's not about creating problems but finding solutions. If no one has
the right to fix errors in articles and if every minor change has to
be discussed over and over again on the ML, it's the dead of a vital
wiki.

Then you need a CMS instead, call it docs.centos.org and leave the
community alone at 'projects.centos.org/community'

Best Regards
Marcus
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Brian Mathis
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 3:45 PM, R P Herrold  wrote:
> On Thu, 1 Oct 2009, Marcus Moeller wrote:
>
>> Why not granting Edit rights (and I mean full Edit Group Access) to
>> anyone who has already contributed good stuff.
>>
>> Then there should be something like a Wiki Admin group which will
>> track changes and correct them || start discussion on the MLs if
>> necessary.
>
> because creating a problem and fixing it ex post is harder
> than not creating it in the first place
>
> -- Russ herrold

Spam issues aside, that is the very concept of Wikipedia and other
wikis, and also for all modern VCS tools, and most of them have proven
that line of thinking really doesn't hold up.

Old VCS tools used the locking model to try to prevent errors before
they happened.  This created an issue every time someone needed a
file, even if they didn't need to change it, and pushed the problem
onto everyone all the time.  You also needed a dedicated admin who
could resolve old locks, etc  Modern VCS systems recognize that
the problem should only be pushed onto users if there's actually a
conflict, and it allows everyone else to work while avoiding problems
most of the time.

What you currently have is the "lock model", and with few admins the
idea of opening up the system seems like a bad one because those
admins will need to deal with all those errors, but this is not the
case.  As soon as it's open, you'll have more people monitoring and
more people who can fix errors as they are introduced.
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Scott Robbins
On Thu, Oct 01, 2009 at 11:26:40AM -0400, R P Herrold wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Sep 2009, Phil Schaffner wrote:
> 
> ...
> > P.S. Also develop a thick skin.  :-)  This could be a proving-ground for
> > technical writers in-training, and the constructive criticism can
> > sometimes be a bit heavy, but it is generally well-intended.
> 
> As one of the lead mosquito's [1], I resemble that remark

(One pictures Russ bowing to the audience here.)


> 
> Seriously, to me, I've been thinking about it the source of my 
> concern for the last couple of weeks, and the tension comes 
> down to 'core' v 'adjunct' and has a reasonably simple 
> resolution -- split the two, and put all non-core material in 
> a 'projects.centos.org' sub domain
> 

After the last flame go round, I communicated with the head of the Arch
Wiki, asking how they filtered content and so on. 

They kindly replied, saying that what had happened was this.  First,
there were three and only three people who basically redid the whole
wiki.  Then, they were burnt out and gave the task this this person.
(The one with whom I was corresponding).  I think that is part of it,
one, or at most 3 (more or less like-minded) people making the
decisions. 

To overly simplify, one esteemed member might feel that one should just
put the steps for installing program X on CentOS, and once the yum
install is done (or whatever little tweaks have to be made afterwards),
the user should then be sent to program X's website.

Someone else, equally esteemed (in both cases, having earned their
esteem by merit--use of esteemed here is not sarcastic), feels that the
article should then tell the newcomer what to do with their new
program--perhaps because program X's website is outdated, or overly
complex, or for whatever reason.  

So, the author of the article gets caught between two esteemed people,
wondering, perhaps, if they made a mistake.   Meanwhile, it makes the
rest of us who view the drama, far less apt to even consider offering
an article to the CentOS wiki.

So, Russ' suggestion most certainly has merit, if it could stop this
situation. I think section that actually tells you
what to do with something after installing it will get far more traffic,
but  that's as may be. 

   :)


-- 
Scott Robbins
PGP keyID EB3467D6
( 1B48 077D 66F6 9DB0 FDC2 A409 FA54 EB34 67D6 )
gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys EB3467D6

Buffy: Cordelia, your mouth is open, sound is coming from it, 
this is never good. 
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Marcus Moeller
Dear Russ,

>> Seriously, to me, I've been thinking about it the source of my
>> concern for the last couple of weeks, and the tension comes
>> down to 'core' v 'adjunct' and has a reasonably simple
>> resolution -- split the two, and put all non-core material in
>> a 'projects.centos.org' sub domain
>>
>> That would permit a clear division of 'official' content --
>> rebuilds of upstream doco, an authoritative 'watched' wiki
>> component for docoing CentOS specific variants, a
>> target to point to as to recurring IRC, forum, etc issues, and
>> another place open much more widely (in: x.projects. ... ) for
>> whatever the cat wants to drag in.  I'll happily ignore what
>> happens in 'projects', and the 'official' retains merit
>> without pollution

I am not sure if splitting the 'Community' from the project would make sense.

Why not granting Edit rights (and I mean full Edit Group Access) to
anyone who has already contributed good stuff.

Then there should be something like a Wiki Admin group which will
track changes and correct them || start discussion on the MLs if
necessary.

Best Regards
Marcus
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Ed Heron
From: "R P Herrold", Thursday, October 01, 2009 9:26 AM

>...
> Seriously, to me, I've been thinking about it the source of my
> concern for the last couple of weeks, and the tension comes
> down to 'core' v 'adjunct' and has a reasonably simple
> resolution -- split the two, and put all non-core material in
> a 'projects.centos.org' sub domain
>
> That would permit a clear division of 'official' content -- 
> rebuilds of upstream doco, an authoritative 'watched' wiki
> component for docoing CentOS specific variants, a
> target to point to as to recurring IRC, forum, etc issues, and
> another place open much more widely (in: x.projects. ... ) for
> whatever the cat wants to drag in.  I'll happily ignore what
> happens in 'projects', and the 'official' retains merit
> without pollution

+1

> We do it with the division between [base] and [updates] - v -
> [centosplus] and [testing] split ... I am examining [extras]
> content this week, and suspect I'll find some vulnerable items
> that I've not been watching for.  I had missed the fact we
> were shipping [addons] and [extras] enabled, as I always drop
> in custom configs for yum, and I need to complete an audit.
> [[addons] is empty as to C5 where my focus lies -- it too
> needs a review for prior versions]

  I was rather surprised when I noticed those were enabled.

  Is there a way for yum search to report which repository a package is in 
without the repository being enabled?  With a simple reminder of how to 
enable the repository if the user wants to install that package?

> Just my current thinking
>
> -- Russ herrold
>
> [1] 
> http://blog.petaflop.de/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/giant-mosquito-bites-riesenmoskito-riesenmuecke-end-of-alaska-highway-mile-1422-delta-junction-alaska-usa-dscn0969.jpg

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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Ned Slider
Steve Bonds wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 6:52 PM, Phil Schaffner
> P.R.Schaffner-at-IEEE.org |CentOS| <...>
> wrote:
>> On Wed, 2009-09-30 at 16:25 -0700, Steve Bonds wrote:
>>> As requested on http://wiki.centos.org/Contribute, here is my info:
>>>
>>> # your FirstnameLastname username [SteveBonds]
>>> # the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
>>> # the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
>>>
>>> I'll branch out from here.  Maybe.  While I understand the problem
>>> with spammers, asking each user to send each proposed page to the list
>>> for creation, then wait until it's created, and only then get to
>>> edit... is pretty onerous compared to other options.
>> Agreed, and there have been discussions of opening the process.  For now
>> it's a meritocracy.   Follow the process, become known to the community,
>> make some good contributions, then ask for a higher level of access.
>> Chances are it will be granted.
>>
>> Welcome to centos-docs!
>>
>> Phil
>>
>> P.S. Also develop a thick skin.  :-)  This could be a proving-ground for
>> technical writers in-training, and the constructive criticism can
>> sometimes be a bit heavy, but it is generally well-intended.
> 
> Thanks, Phil.  I've been on the Internet for 20 years.  I could loan
> my skin out to elephants.  Well... most days.  :-)
> 
>   -- Steve

Welcome Steve :)

Nothing much to add above what Phil has already said, other than to say 
welcome.

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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Ralph Angenendt
Grrr, let me try with a non-empty mail :)

On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 1:25 AM, Steve Bonds <05s0pq...@sneakemail.com> wrote:
> As requested on http://wiki.centos.org/Contribute, here is my info:
>
> # your FirstnameLastname username [SteveBonds]
> # the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]

Well, yes, go ahead with that ...

> # the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
>
> I'll branch out from here.  Maybe.  While I understand the problem
> with spammers, asking each user to send each proposed page to the list
> for creation, then wait until it's created, and only then get to
> edit... is pretty onerous compared to other options.

Yeah, true. Maybe I should really try to get that going.

Watch this space for a call for "Editors" :)

Ralph
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-10-01 Thread Ralph Angenendt
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 1:25 AM, Steve Bonds <05s0pq...@sneakemail.com> wrote:
> As requested on http://wiki.centos.org/Contribute, here is my info:
>
> # your FirstnameLastname username [SteveBonds]
> # the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
> # the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
>
> I'll branch out from here.  Maybe.  While I understand the problem
> with spammers, asking each user to send each proposed page to the list
> for creation, then wait until it's created, and only then get to
> edit... is pretty onerous compared to other options.
>
>  -- Steve
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-09-30 Thread Steve Bonds
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 6:52 PM, Phil Schaffner
P.R.Schaffner-at-IEEE.org |CentOS| <...>
wrote:
> On Wed, 2009-09-30 at 16:25 -0700, Steve Bonds wrote:
>> As requested on http://wiki.centos.org/Contribute, here is my info:
>>
>> # your FirstnameLastname username [SteveBonds]
>> # the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
>> # the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
>>
>> I'll branch out from here.  Maybe.  While I understand the problem
>> with spammers, asking each user to send each proposed page to the list
>> for creation, then wait until it's created, and only then get to
>> edit... is pretty onerous compared to other options.
>
> Agreed, and there have been discussions of opening the process.  For now
> it's a meritocracy.   Follow the process, become known to the community,
> make some good contributions, then ask for a higher level of access.
> Chances are it will be granted.
>
> Welcome to centos-docs!
>
> Phil
>
> P.S. Also develop a thick skin.  :-)  This could be a proving-ground for
> technical writers in-training, and the constructive criticism can
> sometimes be a bit heavy, but it is generally well-intended.

Thanks, Phil.  I've been on the Internet for 20 years.  I could loan
my skin out to elephants.  Well... most days.  :-)

  -- Steve
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Re: [CentOS-docs] New User Wishes to Contribute

2009-09-30 Thread Phil Schaffner
On Wed, 2009-09-30 at 16:25 -0700, Steve Bonds wrote:
> As requested on http://wiki.centos.org/Contribute, here is my info:
> 
> # your FirstnameLastname username [SteveBonds]
> # the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
> # the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
> 
> I'll branch out from here.  Maybe.  While I understand the problem
> with spammers, asking each user to send each proposed page to the list
> for creation, then wait until it's created, and only then get to
> edit... is pretty onerous compared to other options.

Agreed, and there have been discussions of opening the process.  For now
it's a meritocracy.   Follow the process, become known to the community,
make some good contributions, then ask for a higher level of access.
Chances are it will be granted.

Welcome to centos-docs!

Phil

P.S. Also develop a thick skin.  :-)  This could be a proving-ground for
technical writers in-training, and the constructive criticism can
sometimes be a bit heavy, but it is generally well-intended.

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