Daniel Carrera <[email protected]> writes: > If you are trying to promote wxPerl, then, by definition, you are > looking for users who are not currently well informed. Your target > audience is not existing users who already found your wiki. Promoting > wxPerl means targeting users who have not visited your website, or who > are not sure that the project is actively developed or if anyone is > using it.
I see the wiki as a place where we can collaboratively collect information, documents, write examples and stuff. In due time, these materials can be made available in other places, e.g. wxperl.org, or the wiki can be made more prominently visible. Currently, it's for us, you and me, people that are trying to improve something. > (2) I have already offered to contribute, but I am not keen to have my > effort hidden in a place that is hard to find. The wiki is currently not very visible, that's true. But several people are actively involved. Also, discussions like this will draw more people to the wiki. > If my contributions are hidden away, I feel like I did all the work > for nothing. I have both time and energy, but I direct it to places > where I feel that my work will mean something to someone. I'm sure you > can sympathize with that. Yes. But consider this: there's writing and there's publishing. Write on the wiki, share with us, let us help you, and see how we can get it published. -- Johan
