* Emacs Wiki Revision History @ 2008-10-20 10:54 Volkan YAZICI 2008-10-20 12:30 ` Nikolaj Schumacher ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Volkan YAZICI @ 2008-10-20 10:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Hi, While I was looking at revision histories of some of the pages in emacs wiki[1], unfortunately saw that most of the entries are lost. (The oldest history record appears something similar to "UTC Revision 10 . . . . 146.124.141.59 – Rollback to 2008-09-05 00:16 UTC".) Is this something to be recovered in a near future, or totally lost? Regards. [1] http://www.emacswiki.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-20 10:54 Emacs Wiki Revision History Volkan YAZICI @ 2008-10-20 12:30 ` Nikolaj Schumacher 2008-10-20 15:03 ` Drew Adams ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Nikolaj Schumacher @ 2008-10-20 12:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Volkan YAZICI; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs Volkan YAZICI <volkan.yazici@gmail.com> wrote: > (The oldest history record appears something similar to "UTC Revision > 10 . . . . 146.124.141.59 – Rollback to 2008-09-05 00:16 UTC".) Is > this something to be recovered in a near future, or totally lost? IIRC, the Emacs wiki saves only a limited history due to resource constrains. regards, Nikolaj Schumacher ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* RE: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-20 10:54 Emacs Wiki Revision History Volkan YAZICI 2008-10-20 12:30 ` Nikolaj Schumacher @ 2008-10-20 15:03 ` Drew Adams 2008-10-20 17:58 ` Xah [not found] ` <mailman.1578.1224505841.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 3 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2008-10-20 15:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 'Volkan YAZICI', help-gnu-emacs > While I was looking at revision histories of some of the pages in > emacs wiki[1], unfortunately saw that most of the entries are lost. > (The oldest history record appears something similar to "UTC Revision > 10 . . . . 146.124.141.59 - Rollback to 2008-09-05 00:16 UTC".) Is > this something to be recovered in a near future, or totally lost? http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsWikiProblems ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-20 10:54 Emacs Wiki Revision History Volkan YAZICI 2008-10-20 12:30 ` Nikolaj Schumacher 2008-10-20 15:03 ` Drew Adams @ 2008-10-20 17:58 ` Xah 2008-10-21 8:04 ` Alex Schroeder ` (2 more replies) [not found] ` <mailman.1578.1224505841.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 3 siblings, 3 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Xah @ 2008-10-20 17:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs petOn Oct 20, 3:54 am, Volkan YAZICI <volkan.yaz...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > While I was looking at revision histories of some of the pages in > emacs wiki[1], unfortunately saw that most of the entries are lost. > (The oldest history record appears something similar to "UTC Revision > 10 . . . . 146.124.141.59 – Rollback to 2008-09-05 00:16 UTC".) Is > this something to be recovered in a near future, or totally lost? > > Regards. > > [1]http://www.emacswiki.org/ for the love of emacs community, please suggest to it's creator Alex Schroeder to switch the emacs wiki's software to MediaWiki as the wiki software, instead of his pet of 4k line of perl OddMuse that doesn't use a real database. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MediaWiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OddMuse I have been thinking for a while for doing this ... register a domain, install MediaWiki, and copy emacswiki.org content over. whoever does this do emacs community a service. Xah ∑ http://xahlee.org/ ☄ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-20 17:58 ` Xah @ 2008-10-21 8:04 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-21 12:04 ` ack [not found] ` <mailman.1709.1224598815.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> [not found] ` <mailman.1662.1224576628.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-22 0:25 ` Xavier Maillard 2 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-21 8:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Xah <xahlee <at> gmail.com> writes: > for the love of emacs community, please suggest to it's creator Alex > Schroeder to switch the emacs wiki's software to MediaWiki as the wiki > software, instead of his pet of 4k line of perl OddMuse that doesn't > use a real database. Don't waste your time. :) > I have been thinking for a while for doing this ... register a domain, > install MediaWiki, and copy emacswiki.org content over. > > whoever does this do emacs community a service. Please do. I invite you to set up a suitable site and when you're done, invite people voice their opinion. I'm not married to emacswiki.org – if somebody else will do a better job, I'll gladly hand it over. Start here and pick your starting point: http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/WikiDownload The SVN repository will give you the raw wiki pages and no history. The Rsync repository will give you everything including the log files. Alex. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-21 8:04 ` Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-21 12:04 ` ack [not found] ` <mailman.1709.1224598815.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: ack @ 2008-10-21 12:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs > Xah <xahlee <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > for the love of emacs community, please suggest to it's creator Alex > > Schroeder to switch the emacs wiki's software to MediaWiki as the wiki > > software, instead of his pet of 4k line of perl OddMuse that doesn't > > use a real database. > > Don't waste your time. :) > > > I have been thinking for a while for doing this ... register a domain, > > install MediaWiki, and copy emacswiki.org content over. > > MediaWiki? You've got to be kidding. A database is by no means a requirement for such a thing as emacswiki (or most wiki's for that matter). Oddmuse works really quite well and it's text formatting is much nicer than that of MediaWiki in my opinion. You of course are free to do what you like, but for the love of all things good and nice, please choose some other wiki (almost any other wiki) than MediaWiki. ack > > whoever does this do emacs community a service. > > Please do. I invite you to set up a suitable site and when you're done, invit > e > people voice their opinion. I'm not married to emacswiki.org – if somebody els > e > will do a better job, I'll gladly hand it over. > > Start here and pick your starting point: > http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/WikiDownload > > The SVN repository will give you the raw wiki pages and no history. The Rsync > repository will give you everything including the log files. > > Alex. > > > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1709.1224598815.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-21 18:55 ` Xah 2008-10-22 9:26 ` Paul R [not found] ` <mailman.1777.1224667634.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Xah @ 2008-10-21 18:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Xah Lee wrote: «I have been thinking for a while for doing this ... register a domain, install MediaWiki, and copy emacswiki.org content over.» On Oct 21, 5:04 am, ack <ackack1...@gmail.com> wrote: > MediaWiki? You've got to be kidding. A database is by no means a > requirement for such a thing as emacswiki (or most wiki's for that > matter). > > Oddmuse works really quite well and it's text formatting is much nicer > than that of MediaWiki in my opinion. > > You of course are free to do what you like, but for the love of all > things good and nice, please choose some other wiki (almost any other > wiki) than MediaWiki. Wikipedia has been the world top most 10 visited site since about 2005. (see http://www.alexa.com/site/ds/top_sites?ts_mode=global ) «Wikipedia receives between 20,000 and 45,000 page requests per second, depending on time of day.» — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia «English Wikipedia reached 4,000,000 registered user accounts on 1 April 2007» — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Wikipedia Media has a user base of few million times more than OddMuse. The familiarity of users is important when it is of that magnitude. Similarly, tools that works with MediaWiki is some hunderd, thousands, times more, in various computing langs, than OddMuse. please see also: Emacs wiki Problems http://xahlee.org/emacs/emacs_wiki_problem.html excerpt: « Emacs wiki Problems The emacs wiki ( http://www.emacswiki.org/ ), started by Alex Schroeder sometimes in 2005 or before, is great. However, i think it could've been better. (1) The wiki software used is Oddmuse, which is a perl script of 4k lines, using flat files as database. As such, it is not comprehensive or powerful. (2) The content, is kinda haphazard. It is somewhat in-between of a encyclopedia-style treatment like Wikipedia and a chaotic online forum. Specifically, when you visit a article, half of article will be dialogues between different users on tips or issues or preferences. I commented to Alex about these problems. I suggest that it should use the same software Wikipedia uses, the MediaWiki↗. So that, it is far more powerful, with large scale programer support, and the user interface for the wiki will be one that's widely known to millions of users world-wide. (note: Oddmuse↗ is something written by Alex himself, a pet love of sorts) I also suggested that the writing guidelines should follow Wikipedia's style. Specifically, the content editing should be one with the goal of creating a comprehensive, coherent, article that gives readers info or tutorial about the subject. (as opposed to, serving partly as a online forum between emacs users and maintaining dialogue integrity) I think there's a lot potential to emacs wiki. It could, for example, develop into a comprehensive elisp library archive (e.g. CPAN↗). Listing packages by category, with each package come with a article that discuss its author, purpose, status, caveats, tutorial, similar packages ...etc. And the packages needs not just be modes... but libraries as in most languages. (for example, js2 and nxml modes are both complete parsers for javascript and xml, each of thousands lines of elisp code. They should actually be several libraries, so that these parsers can be widely deployed as language modules, not confined in use just in one editing mode. Such is largely not done in emacs/ elisp community due to emacs being primarily a text-editor with relatively few elisp programers... but is slowing happening anyway (it is something that eventually must happen). A good wiki can be great help in ushering necessary improvements and increase the speed of evolution.) For the above to take shape, the wiki must adopt a style so that articles aim to be a coherent treatment of the subject (as opposed to dialogue and random tips). (and this is done by crafting the contribution guidelines or rules; exemplarily done by Wikipedia) Also, i'd think the wiki's software should adopt something widely supported such as MediaWiki, as opposed to one-man's pet project. » Xah ∑ http://xahlee.org/ ☄ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-21 18:55 ` Xah @ 2008-10-22 9:26 ` Paul R 2008-10-22 22:45 ` Bastien ` (2 more replies) [not found] ` <mailman.1777.1224667634.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 3 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Paul R @ 2008-10-22 9:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Xah; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 11:55:22 -0700 (PDT), Xah <xahlee@gmail.com> said: Xah> (2) The content, is kinda haphazard. It is somewhat in-between of Xah> a encyclopedia-style treatment like Wikipedia and a chaotic Xah> online forum. Specifically, when you visit a article, half of Xah> article will be dialogues between different users on tips or Xah> issues or preferences. This is the only statement I can agree with. But AFAICT, Alex has been most of the time on his own to create and maintain emacswiki software. I guess he would welcome some help concerning hosting, development or administration. Also, Wikipedia success is mostly unrelated to the wiki engine sitting below. MediaWiki would be a poor choice for emacswiki, IMO. Alex, have you considered using a third party wiki engine for emacs wiki before ? Is there a page where you state your current position on that ? The only thing I feel concerned about oddmuse is the time you may have to spend to maintain it, although I have no idea whether it is high or low, and whether you enjoy doing it or not. In case you are looking for a good quality free software package that could maybe run emacswiki, I would point to DokuWiki. Light and powerfull, no database, very good parsing capabilities hence easy-to-write plugins for various syntax enhencements. Some dokuwiki-syntax modes are already around. In many ways it shares design patterns with oddmuse. I had very good experiences with it for various purposes, and although I usually have some scepticism with "cool php software", I must admit this one is reliable and very well written. In the meantime, thank you Alex for running emacswiki, a precious ressource. -- Paul http://www.dokuwiki.org/dokuwiki http://www.dokuwiki.org/features ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-22 9:26 ` Paul R @ 2008-10-22 22:45 ` Bastien 2008-10-23 8:25 ` Xavier Maillard [not found] ` <mailman.1889.1224757773.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-23 8:25 ` Xavier Maillard [not found] ` <mailman.1856.1224715571.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Bastien @ 2008-10-22 22:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Yes, the first thing to say in this thread is: thanks! Thanks for oddmuse (which is quite a good piece of software, I've used it for several projects) and thanks for maintaining emacswiki. I'm not sure it's really worth considering other wiki softwares (I didn't see any good argument for this) but like Paul, I would also point at dokuwiki. The two main advantages I see with dokuwiki are: flat files and documentation-oriented wiki. See the Ubuntu documentation wiki. -- Bastien ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-22 22:45 ` Bastien @ 2008-10-23 8:25 ` Xavier Maillard [not found] ` <mailman.1889.1224757773.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Xavier Maillard @ 2008-10-23 8:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Bastien; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs Hi, The two main advantages I see with dokuwiki are: flat files and documentation-oriented wiki. See the Ubuntu documentation wiki. One mandatory thing we should keep is the possibility to edit and to browse EmacsWiki trough GNU Emacs itself. OddMuse has a neat mode for that and I do not think that either dokuwiki nor mediawiki have such modes (or they have, not as good as oddmuse.el). Another cool wiki engine (no database, flat files only and a RCS engine) could be ikiwiki (http://ikiwiki.info). It uses markdown syntax, uses any RCS you like to maintain your history (Git is the preferred way but you can use GNU bzr, tla, mercurial, ...). You can edit thw wiki either from a simple text editor (emacs comes to mind ;)) or using a CGI wrapper. As you use a RCS tool, you can browse history for any files/pages and fixing a SPAM attack is as simple as reverting to old revision using CLI commands. Wiki can be protected with local account and/or OpenID logins thus restricting SPAM rushes. Cons: it is unlikely it has several billions users :) But, in respect to Alex's work, I think we should keep the current wiki engine and focus on the "accessibility" of the wiki: have the information being better organized to make xaahlee happy. Xavier -- http://www.gnu.org http://www.april.org http://www.lolica.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1889.1224757773.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-23 11:10 ` Alex Schroeder 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 11:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Oct 23, 10:25 am, Xavier Maillard <x...@gnu.org> wrote: > But, in respect to Alex's work, I think we should keep the > current wiki engine and focus on the "accessibility" of the wiki: > have the information being better organized to make xaahlee happy. Yep, switching wiki engine will not improve the text. People still have to write it. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-22 9:26 ` Paul R 2008-10-22 22:45 ` Bastien @ 2008-10-23 8:25 ` Xavier Maillard [not found] ` <mailman.1856.1224715571.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Xavier Maillard @ 2008-10-23 8:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Paul R; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, xahlee In the meantime, thank you Alex for running emacswiki, a precious ressource. +1 Nothing to add. Xavier -- http://www.gnu.org http://www.april.org http://www.lolica.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1856.1224715571.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-23 11:07 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 14:35 ` Bastien [not found] ` <mailman.1911.1224772552.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 11:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Oct 23, 12:45 am, Bastien <bastiengue...@googlemail.com> wrote: > The two main advantages I see with dokuwiki are: flat files and > documentation-oriented wiki. See the Ubuntu documentation wiki. I wonder what that means. What is documentation-oriented software? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-23 11:07 ` Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 14:35 ` Bastien [not found] ` <mailman.1911.1224772552.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Bastien @ 2008-10-23 14:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Alex Schroeder <kensanata@gmail.com> writes: > On Oct 23, 12:45 am, Bastien <bastiengue...@googlemail.com> wrote: >> The two main advantages I see with dokuwiki are: flat files and >> documentation-oriented wiki. See the Ubuntu documentation wiki. > > I wonder what that means. What is documentation-oriented software? The "doku" from "dokuwiki" tells it: it was first designed with the purpose of letting people write good documentation collaboratively. The main use of dokuwiki I'm aware of - Ubuntu website - seems to illustrate this, but "documentation-oriented" was not an ontological statement. Two nice extensions that go into that direction: 1. Export a page in .odt format 2. Display a page as a S5 presentation -- Bastien ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1911.1224772552.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-23 22:06 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 22:53 ` Lennart Borgman ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 22:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On 23 Okt., 16:35, Bastien <bastiengue...@googlemail.com> wrote: > The "doku" from "dokuwiki" tells it: it was first designed with the > purpose of letting people write good documentation collaboratively. Hm. It seems that "write good documentation collaboratively" can be achieved with any tool that allows authors to collaborate when writing text. I'd be surprised if the software used can make a mediocre text "good". As you must have noticed, I'm think that the "doku" in Dokuwiki is excellent marketing, but doesn't make a good argument. Perhaps I should call my software "Emacs Wiki" -- it's designed with the purpose of letting people write about Emacs collaboratively, haha. :) > 1. Export a page in .odt format > 2. Display a page as a S5 presentation Ok, that seems like a useful thing to have depending on your needs. Personally, I don't see to need for these two in the context of Emacs Wiki, but if somebody really wanted those, then clearly Dokuwiki might be an interesting option. You get to decide whether to invest time into migrating the existing wiki or reinventing the wheel in Perl, I guess. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-23 22:06 ` Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 22:53 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-10-24 2:54 ` Bastien [not found] ` <mailman.1968.1224816864.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2008-10-23 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Schroeder; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 12:06 AM, Alex Schroeder <kensanata@gmail.com> wrote: > On 23 Okt., 16:35, Bastien <bastiengue...@googlemail.com> wrote: >> The "doku" from "dokuwiki" tells it: it was first designed with the >> purpose of letting people write good documentation collaboratively. > > Hm. It seems that "write good documentation collaboratively" can be > achieved with any tool that allows authors to collaborate when writing > text. I'd be surprised if the software used can make a mediocre text > "good". I think EmacsWiki is a very good invention, but there are some things that I have been missing. Those things falls in between good collaboration and assisting software. What I am thinking of is marking advices and code with notes about where they work or/and are tested. Simple examples are Emacs version, but it could also be combinations of different kinds (using a minor mode together with a certain major mode etc). I believe the wiki software could provide some help for structuring this but I do not even have an idea for the structure and far less for what assistance the software could give. It looks difficult but useful to me. Perhaps this could grow spontaneously on the wiki with time, perhaps some assistance by the software is needed. I believe in the latter but I fear any assistance of that kind might put too much restrictions on writing. When I have come that far in my thoughts I am a bit stuck. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-23 22:06 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 22:53 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-10-24 2:54 ` Bastien [not found] ` <mailman.1968.1224816864.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Bastien @ 2008-10-24 2:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Alex Schroeder <kensanata@gmail.com> writes: > On 23 Okt., 16:35, Bastien <bastiengue...@googlemail.com> wrote: >> The "doku" from "dokuwiki" tells it: it was first designed with the >> purpose of letting people write good documentation collaboratively. > > Hm. It seems that "write good documentation collaboratively" can be > achieved with any tool that allows authors to collaborate when writing > text. I'd be surprised if the software used can make a mediocre text > "good". You stripped the sentence where I say: "but 'documentation-oriented' was not an ontological statement." Which was meant to convey the idea that I don't think there are wikis strongly more suitable for documentation than others. Still, I think many of the functionalities/extensions of dokuwiki are here because of the need for collaborative documentation. Anyway, I'm happy with the current emacswiki. -- Bastien ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1968.1224816864.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-24 10:15 ` Alex Schroeder 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-24 10:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On 24 Okt., 04:54, Bastien <bastiengue...@googlemail.com> wrote: > Still, I think many of the functionalities/extensions of > dokuwiki are here because of the need for collaborative documentation. Well, if there is anything in particular that you would like to see for Emacs Wiki, let me know. I still develop new Oddmuse extensions every now and then. :) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1777.1224667634.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-23 11:00 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 20:43 ` Xah 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 11:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs > On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 11:55:22 -0700 (PDT), Xah <xahlee <at> gmail.com> said: > Xah> (2) The content, is kinda haphazard. It is somewhat in-between of > Xah> a encyclopedia-style treatment like Wikipedia and a chaotic > Xah> online forum. Specifically, when you visit a article, half of > Xah> article will be dialogues between different users on tips or > Xah> issues or preferences. Paul R <paul.r.ml <at> gmail.com> writes: > This is the only statement I can agree with. Indeed, I agree with this statement as well. But that is as it should be: The wiki is broken as specified in this respect. What follows is a short rant on what the Emacs Wiki is and is not. :) For Emacs, I don't care about a perfect wiki that can replace the manual. Emacs is and remains the self-documenting editor. As such, the good stuff, the well explained stuff, the carefully thought out stuff, the edited and checked stuff should go into the manual -- either the Emacs manual, or the Emacs Lisp Manual, or the Emacs Lisp Introduction. I don't care. When I set up the wiki I was frustrated with how slow the FAQ was changing and the endless repetitions on the newsgroups and mailing lists. That's where the wiki fits in: It changes faster than the FAQ, it has less repetitions than the newsgroups and mailing lists, but it is not as structured and honed as the manual is. Comparing it to the Wikipedia, where the wiki is the real thing, or to the Emacs manual, is a no brainer. Of course it doesn't compare. But it doesn't have to. The wiki is in a separate category. And of course the Emacs Wiki has the benefit of letting other people put their text where their mouth is: If people like Xah feel that the text of the wiki is lacking in quality, feel free to step up and work on it. Just like Free Software, complaining is far less effective than doing. The only thing I will oppose very strongly is the setting up of guidelines and requirements and all sorts of foolish rules, because that doesn't improve the text. It just prevents other people from posting. Way to go, social skills. This is the end of the rant. > But AFAICT, Alex has been > most of the time on his own to create and maintain emacswiki software. > I guess he would welcome some help concerning hosting, development or > administration. Actually I am quite happy with how things are going. I spend very little time on Emacs Wiki specific things. I like working on my wiki engine; I use it for other projects including my homepage, my dad's blog, and so on. If somebody feels the urge to write an extension that we should use for Emacs Wiki, feel free to step forward. As the spam problem is very much under control at the moment, there's also very little to do for administrators. Hosting is costing me EUR 20 a month which isn't so bad. I'd feel ridiculous accepting donations for that. I'd rather people donated to some charity or joined the FSF. Or -- even better -- people could donate time and energy by improving the actual text on Emacs Wiki. That's much more important than the software. > Alex, have you considered using a third party wiki engine for emacs > wiki before? No, never. I use my own software because I know exactly what it does, I have full control over the code, and I feel very comfortable extending it. Switching to something else would mean more work for me. That's why I suggested that anybody interested in it set up their own site, start mirroring Emacs Wiki page content, look at all the background jobs, redirects, URL rewrite rules, text formatting rules, etc. And when they're finished, handing over the domain name will be a trivial thing by comparison. But I'm not willing to do the work for somebody else. They need to do it themselves. > In the meantime, thank you Alex for running emacswiki, a precious > ressource. Thanks! :) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-23 11:00 ` Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 20:43 ` Xah 2008-10-23 22:47 ` Alex Schroeder 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Xah @ 2008-10-23 20:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs 2008-10-23 Xah Lee wrote: «(2) The content, is kinda haphazard. It is somewhat in-between of a encyclopedia-style treatment like Wikipedia and a chaotic online forum. Specifically, when you visit a article, half of article will be dialogues between different users on tips or issues or preferences.» Alex Schroeder wrote: «Indeed, I agree with this statement as well. But that is as it should be: The wiki is broken as specified in this respect. What follows is a short rant on what the Emacs Wiki is and is not. :)» Alex Schroeder wrote: «For Emacs, I don't care about a perfect wiki that can replace the manual. Emacs is and remains the self-documenting editor. As such, the good stuff, the well explained stuff, the carefully thought out stuff, the edited and checked stuff should go into the manual -- either the Emacs manual, or the Emacs Lisp Manual, or the Emacs Lisp Introduction. I don't care. When I set up the wiki I was frustrated with how slow the FAQ was changing and the endless repetitions on the newsgroups and mailing lists. That's where the wiki fits in: It changes faster than the FAQ, it has less repetitions than the newsgroups and mailing lists, but it is not as structured and honed as the manual is.» Now the emacswiki has been there for a while, we can think how to make it better and work toward that goal, as opposed to what the original intention was. Alex wrote: «Comparing it to the Wikipedia, where the wiki is the real thing, or to the Emacs manual, is a no brainer. Of course it doesn't compare. But it doesn't have to. The wiki is in a separate category.» «And of course the Emacs Wiki has the benefit of letting other people put their text where their mouth is: If people like Xah feel that the text of the wiki is lacking in quality, feel free to step up and work on it. Just like Free Software, complaining is far less effective than doing.» Criticism is not complaining, and even complaining is a significant form of contribution when done naturally. A significant contribution of major philosophers to society throughout history, is to criticize or complain. “Complaining” is not necessarily inferior to “doing”. A healthy, prosperous community, needs both. in the tech geeker's open source community, there's a major problem of the mindset of “contribution”, where almost anything less than code contribution is deem by tech geekers as wanton bitching, especially when it arose in a online discussion turned quarrel. This “contribution” mindset does lots of harm to the growth and progress of open source community. To various degrees, it lessens the power of discussion, spur forking of projects, duplication of coding effort, proliferation of less quality code. (See also: • Responsible Software Licensing http://xahlee.org/UnixResource_dir/writ/responsible_license.html • Criticism versus Constructive Criticism http://xahlee.org/UnixResource_dir/writ/criticism.html ) For example, why do you fork UseModWiki ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UseModWiki ) in the first place? In some tech geeker's sense, you are reinventing the wheel. if i quietly grabbed your emacswiki content (which is perfectly legal and guaranteed a right under FSF associated licenses) and shape it in the way i think is proper (i.e. using MediaWiki), effective a fork, such deed is often controversial as you must know, and often it spur animosity among groups and create factions. whether forking in general does good or bad to society, is a complex issue and there's no simple answer. When philosophies and vision or methods between developers differ significantly, forking is probably the only recourse. And such forked project contribute diversity (as linux distros), and sometimes ultimately determines which is better one, or may spur huge competition and change (as Xemacs did to emacs). But on the other hand, sometimes forking is merely a result of political animosity. (e.g. “somebody else's” project vs “My” project.) I can, and i might, take your blessing and create a alternative emacswiki, or even consume emacswiki.org with your help. That takes a lot dedication, time, and some money to do it. As i mentioned, MediaWiki interface is familiar to some one hundred of thousand time more users than OddMuse, and there are perhaps hundreds times more tools to work with MediaWiki than OddMuse. With MediaWiki, you also automatically have a lot features, such as images, math formula formatting, display of audio, citation, category, syntax highlighting, language support, each of these far more robust and diverse than OddMuse if it support it. These features, seemingly not much useful for a wiki for emacs, but you'd be surprised what people do and how things grow. (for one example, emacs wiki could use lots of screenshots, and with that, you'll eventually need MediaWiki's image annotation and citation features) one reason you cited against MediaWiki is that it's rather difficult or complex to install. I agree OddMuse is far more easier to install. (just one perl file) However, you are a expert in the Web App field, and so am i. For a web app professional, to install MediaWiki, with its associated database etc, isn't that hard. Even i haven't done so, i think you'll agree, that it takes within 1 week man hour to install it with all content transferred from emacswiki. As you detailed, OddMuse is pretty much just your pet project. That and its simplicity is pretty much the reasons you use it for emacswiki. As project gets large, this cannot be remain so without hampering the growth of emacswiki. Alex wrote: «The only thing I will oppose very strongly is the setting up of guidelines and requirements and all sorts of foolish rules, because that doesn't improve the text. It just prevents other people from posting. Way to go, social skills.» I think some guideline is sufficient. The gist is that, someone needs to provide that guideline, or give a indication that coherent article is the goal as opposed to maintaining a conversation of wiki editors. In this case, that someone should be you, because you are the original creator and thus most suitable and authoritative. This guideline or indication is important. For example, sometimes i thought about cleaning out the discussion-oriented texts... which usually means simply delete them. However, if done, it'll raise a lot problems. People will revert it, ask why you delete them, considering it removal of record, resulting quarrel or unease, or even consider it absolute vandal. I being already a controversial figure. As you know, i've been ban'd in freenodes's emacs irc, while you were intimately familiar with the deal, which is also associated with the emacswiki. (see http://xahlee.org/emacs/xah_ban_emacs_irc.html ) If i start to, as you say, “contribute” by editing of the article of removing conversations, that's not gonna go well. Note the fact that the quality of many pages there are in very bad quality as considered as a article. The editing effort will pretty much mean lots of brainless deletions if it is to be meaningful ... some of these conversation contains valuable info, but the discussion style makes it hard to extract info or a huge amount of editing effort. In short, there needs to be some authoritative guideline. Then, the conversation styled dialogues of the wiki would wane. Without such a guideline, and letting tech geekers go freely on what each think is best, is not likely to make emacswiki coherent anytime soon. Large projects requires a leadership. Richard Stallman, is a good example here. In summary, there are 2 things i'm saying, and have tried to say to you 2 or 3 years ago, albeit perhaps in a terse manner. One is to adopt WikiMedia, instead feeling attached to your personal code. (2) It needs a authoritative guideline for emacswiki to grow. For (2), please dont think it is some Big Brother heavy hand on control. The guidelines needs not be harsh, strict, or even enforced. However, it is necessary, that there is such a guideline, and it be required reading for emacswiki editors. (think of Richard Stallman's GNU Manifesto, who actually goes to the trouble of going into legalities with its GPL and FSF corporation.) «Alex, have you considered using a third party wiki engine for emacs wiki before?» Alex wrote: «No, never. I use my own software because I know exactly what it does, I have full control over the code, and I feel very comfortable extending it. Switching to something else would mean more work for me. That's why I suggested that anybody interested in it set up their own site, start mirroring Emacs Wiki page content, look at all the background jobs, redirects, URL rewrite rules, text formatting rules, etc. And when they're finished, handing over the domain name will be a trivial thing by comparison. But I'm not willing to do the work for somebody else. They need to do it themselves.» Ok. Thanks for the explanation. Xah ∑ http://xahlee.org/ ☄ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-23 20:43 ` Xah @ 2008-10-23 22:47 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-24 8:31 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness (was: Emacs Wiki Revision History) Paul R [not found] ` <mailman.1985.1224837085.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 22:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On 23 Okt., 22:43, Xah <xah...@gmail.com> wrote: > Criticism is not complaining, and even complaining is a significant > form of contribution when done naturally. A significant contribution > of major philosophers to society throughout history, is to criticize > or complain. Then again, philosophers don't have the option of doing. The same is true for public works, governments in general, basically anything that you can't do in your free time by yourself. But writing software and writing text is different. The know-how is there, the ability is there, the tools are free and available. It's not the same thing. > “Complaining” is not necessarily inferior to “doing”. A > healthy, prosperous community, needs both. I disagree. A community with people that keep complaining without contributing is a community that I don't want to contribute to. > For example, why do you fork UseModWiki (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UseModWiki > ) in the first place? In some tech geeker's sense, you are reinventing > the wheel. Indeed, why did I? Did you check? Have you read up on the history of UseModWiki? I guess you haven't, or you'd know. > if i quietly grabbed your emacswiki content (which is perfectly legal > and guaranteed a right under FSF associated licenses) and shape it in > the way i think is proper (i.e. using MediaWiki), effective a fork, > such deed is often controversial as you must know, and often it spur > animosity among groups and create factions. Sure. But such is your freedom. And you don't have to grab it quietly. I invite you to do it. Please do it. > I can, and i might, take your blessing and create a alternative > emacswiki, or even consume emacswiki.org with your help. That takes a > lot dedication, time, and some money to do it. Well, it depends. You could start with hosting for USD 5 per month at hcoop.net and a domain name for EUR 12 a year, as far as I can tell. And remember, once you've proven that you can do it, we'll have a vote. If people vote for your site, I'll give you control over the domain name emacswiki.org. Yes, it'll be a bummer for my personal page, and for my dad's blog, and for my godchild, but I'm willing to make that sacrifice because I don't want to stand in the way of progress. If you can serve Emacs' interest better than I can, then I want to support you. I really do. > As i mentioned, > MediaWiki interface is familiar to some one hundred of thousand time > more users than OddMuse, and there are perhaps hundreds times more > tools to work with MediaWiki than OddMuse. Yes, but who needs them? Oddmuse also has benefits over Mediawiki that you seem to be unaware of, or uninterested in. That's ok, I don't mind. > With MediaWiki, you also > automatically have a lot features, such as images, math formula > formatting, display of audio, citation, category, syntax highlighting, > language support, each of these far more robust and diverse than > OddMuse if it support it. These features, seemingly not much useful > for a wiki for emacs, but you'd be surprised what people do and how > things grow. (for one example, emacs wiki could use lots of > screenshots, and with that, you'll eventually need MediaWiki's image > annotation and citation features) You are right. Then again, Oddmuse also offers many extensions. I guess I'd be more interested in developing new extensions or improving existing extensions for Oddmuse instead of migrating it all to Mediawiki and giving those extensions a try. Really, somebody will have to do the work of migrating the wiki to Mediawiki. There's no way around that. No amount of Mediawiki praise will make that work easier. Somebody has to do it. You could be that person. You should try to be that person. > one reason you cited against MediaWiki is that it's rather difficult > or complex to install. I agree OddMuse is far more easier to install. > (just one perl file) However, you are a expert in the Web App field, > and so am i. For a web app professional, to install MediaWiki, with > its associated database etc, isn't that hard. Even i haven't done so, > i think you'll agree, that it takes within 1 week man hour to install > it with all content transferred from emacswiki. Excellent. You seem to be well suited for the job! This is a great opportunity. > As you detailed, OddMuse is pretty much just your pet project. That > and its simplicity is pretty much the reasons you use it for > emacswiki. As project gets large, this cannot be remain so without > hampering the growth of emacswiki. It is a strange conclusion to draw, but that's ok. I thought that the main problem in wiki growth and maintenance is the text, not the software. But I could be wrong. Once you have a working site with all the necessary extensions, URL rewrites, redirections, maintenance jobs, and interfaces to other systems such as the Emacs Lisp List, it will be much easier to see whether the new software will allow Emacs Wiki to grow and improve faster. > I think some guideline is sufficient. The gist is that, someone needs > to provide that guideline, or give a indication that coherent article > is the goal as opposed to maintaining a conversation of wiki editors. > In this case, that someone should be you, because you are the original > creator and thus most suitable and authoritative. Then again, this is not how I want to run a community. If I have any authority at all, that would not be the way I want to use it. Perhaps that's why I have some authority – because people know I'll not get on their nerves. Then again, since I practically never use it, we'll never know for sure whether I have any. I think the onus falls on you to lead by your own example; your social skills and your coding skills will prove your right or wrong. And you don't even have to do all the coding yourself. With enough social skills you'll encourage others to join your project and you'll be able to focus on the usability issues you've identified. I'm wishing you all the best! > This guideline or indication is important. For example, sometimes i > thought about cleaning out the discussion-oriented texts... which > usually means simply delete them. However, if done, it'll raise a lot > problems. People will revert it, ask why you delete them, considering > it removal of record, resulting quarrel or unease, or even consider it > absolute vandal. Absolutely. And if you read through Emacs Wiki, you will in fact find some guidelines. I hope that they're subtle and not too invonvenient. I fear that what you have in mind will be a lot less inviting, but it will be up to you to try. > I being already a controversial figure. As you know, i've been ban'd > in freenodes's emacs irc, while you were intimately familiar with the > deal, which is also associated with the emacswiki. (seehttp://xahlee.org/emacs/xah_ban_emacs_irc.html) If i start to, as you > say, “contribute” by editing of the article of removing conversations, > that's not gonna go well. Note the fact that the quality of many pages > there are in very bad quality as considered as a article. The editing > effort will pretty much mean lots of brainless deletions if it is to > be meaningful ... some of these conversation contains valuable info, > but the discussion style makes it hard to extract info or a huge > amount of editing effort. You are right on all accounts. You are controversial, banned, and editing other people's text needs lots of social skills. I'm afraid I cannot offer you any help on any of these topics. These are complex issues and have no easy answers. > In short, there needs to be some authoritative guideline. Then, the > conversation styled dialogues of the wiki would wane. Without such a > guideline, and letting tech geekers go freely on what each think is > best, is not likely to make emacswiki coherent anytime soon. Large > projects requires a leadership. Richard Stallman, is a good example > here. Well, we agree in that projects need leadership. But what you're in fact doing is saying that I am a project leader and I should lead my project differently. If I am not the project leader you think I am, then we're back to the previous point about your social skills. If I am in fact the project leader you think I am, then I'd argue that perhaps I am because of the way I decided to lead the project – chaning that policy will be tricky. Who knows, I might end up loosing my leadership position. That's also why forking is the easier answer. Note that this is very similar to how oral traditions work. In the area of martial arts and eastern schools of enlightenment, for example, we have an oral tradition. Some things are very difficult to express in words, which is why you cannot write it down. Thus there are no (good) books to learn it from, and you need a "master" to teach you. And the master's qualification is again given by his own master. Thus, knowledge is passed from master to apprentice. This necessitates the belief that you master is right and knows it all. It leads to ideas of a gold age when things were perfect, or of enlightened founders that had perfected a particular technique or school or thought. In this case, if you discover that you want to change something, there's no way of doing that within your own school. You will have to break away and create your own school. You effectively fork! That's why we have so many martial arts schools. Over fifty schools of Kung-Fu! And even rather recent things like Aikido have alreay splintered into different schools. Thus, oral traditions favor forking. Questions of social capital favor forking. But enough of this pseudo science. Back to the business at hand. You should fork the Emacs Wiki and try your ideas. If you fail, I hope you'll agree that I'm under no obligation to change either the tools I use, nor the way I run the project. Think about it this way. Assume that Emacs Wiki was run by a democracy. What would be the thing to do if you're unhappy? You start by writing about your unhappiness. And then you start a party. Collect people that will vote for you, assemble a team of people that can take over maintainership. Fortunately in the electronic world, we can try the new government before we kick out the old government. You can prove your worth before people need to choose. You'll agree that this is much better than what we have in our world of Realpolitik. > In summary, there are 2 things i'm saying, and have tried to say to > you 2 or 3 years ago, albeit perhaps in a terse manner. One is to > adopt WikiMedia, instead feeling attached to your personal code. (2) > It needs a authoritative guideline for emacswiki to grow. I hope that all the time I've spent arguing with you has paid off at last and that you understand the reasons why I reject your two suggestions. Not only do I reject them for the reasons above, I also went above and beyond my social obligations in order to show you a way out of this impasse: There is a way for you to get the cake, and eat it too. > For (2), please dont think it is some Big Brother heavy hand on > control. The guidelines needs not be harsh, strict, or even enforced. > However, it is necessary, that there is such a guideline, and it be > required reading for emacswiki editors. (think of Richard Stallman's > GNU Manifesto, who actually goes to the trouble of going into > legalities with its GPL and FSF corporation.) Sure. I just don't agree with your guidelines and that's that. See above for a way out. Good luck Alex PS: Why was this discussion crossposted to both g.e.help and c.emacs? It seems like a waste of bandwidth. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Emacs, oldsters, newbiness (was: Emacs Wiki Revision History) 2008-10-23 22:47 ` Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-24 8:31 ` Paul R 2008-11-06 20:22 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness Thien-Thi Nguyen [not found] ` <mailman.3016.1226004497.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> [not found] ` <mailman.1985.1224837085.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Paul R @ 2008-10-24 8:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Schroeder; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs I think there is something in the emacs active hackers community now, that has been here for a long time now, and that can be simply formulated . A lot GNU/Emacs active developers develop emacs for their own needs of emacs gurus. Those are concentrating all their efforts on what bog them the most. It's like it has become for them a solitary pleasure, or necessity, to hack on emacs. Doing so, they tend to neglect to clean up and facilitate the steep and hard path going from the state of total newbiness to emacs, to the state of being able to appreciate the work being done at the moment. I am sure they enjoy what they do, as they are highly skilled developpers spending time on what they feel important. But over the time, Emacs from the outside tends to look like a wall, an old rough wall that as been there for ages. Behind the wall, there is the magic treasure that grows with the number of people benefiting from it. But almost nobody is tall enough to see the jowels. Most new comers to emacs I can observe look at this old wall, give a try to climb it, hurt their hands on it and give up. After all, they don't doubt they can find some other jowels far easier to pick up, no matter how beautiful they are. And while hackers enrich the treasure inside, newcomers can't cross the wall, don't feel really welcome, and turn heels. It is in some ways similar to the lack of guidelines in emacswiki. Power users don't mind the relative mess resulting of this policy, and they enjoy the very high freedom they have to drop code here and there, and to start a discussion right in the wiki below the code. But for a newcomer, finding what (s)he looks for will be hard. I think Alex has done a great job at doing what he wanted to. Emacswiki is undoubtedly a success for emacs hackers to put code, tips and to discuss. I guess it was never meant to be a portal to the emacs world, designed to suit newbies needs above all. Maybe what you want, Xah, is such a portal, with very structured information, no duplication, one-problem-one-solution, aimed at being accessible above all. Why not, I'm sure it would be a good thing, although you are probably aware of your current own difficulties at being "accessible", to say the least. Alex has said it all when he sincerely encouraged you to do it. We all do encourage you to do it. But making emacs more accessible to the newcomers is a whole project in itself. Emacswiki, in spite of its relative mess, is clearly a step in this direction. Though, I'm afraid there is not so much room for improvement in this area as long as core developers show constant reluctance to change the defaults of emacs, which are most of this high, rough, wall. -- Paul ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-24 8:31 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness (was: Emacs Wiki Revision History) Paul R @ 2008-11-06 20:22 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen [not found] ` <mailman.3016.1226004497.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2008-11-06 20:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs () Paul R <paul.r.ml@gmail.com> () Fri, 24 Oct 2008 10:31:14 +0200 A lot GNU/Emacs active developers develop emacs for their own needs of emacs gurus. Those are concentrating all their efforts on what bog them the most. It's like it has become for them a solitary pleasure, or necessity, to hack on emacs. Doing so, they tend to neglect to clean up and facilitate the steep and hard path going from the state of total newbiness to emacs, to the state of being able to appreciate the work being done at the moment. facilitate the hardness -- what does that really mean? to make things more pretty dirty, or to make them more ugly clean? mayhaps those hackers are deserving of pity, newbie wonder absconded, they grate on the gritty, trying to recapture the big awe of the big wall, trying to refracture their jigged maw w/ their rigged saw. too precise now, focused instruments thwart them; original curiosity formless, now lost to the short zen. harden the facility -- when is culture just overgrown moss? does the stone monkey even remember five centuries lost? strike out in one direction to cross monsters and rivers, keeping in tow the untoward human that shivers, every hair just a jump from the thousand league mountains, yet plodding on course, burning oils, flowing fountains. return of the fruitful, swift and unforgotten, is wisdom the hand that clamps down, does not soften? thi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness [not found] ` <mailman.3016.1226004497.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-11-07 14:27 ` Ted Zlatanov 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Ted Zlatanov @ 2008-11-07 14:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Thu, 06 Nov 2008 21:22:47 +0100 Thien-Thi Nguyen <ttn@gnuvola.org> wrote: TN> harden the facility -- when is culture just overgrown moss? TN> does the stone monkey even remember five centuries lost? I can assure you that the stone monkey (in fact, *any* stone monkey) does not remember anything. TN> is wisdom the hand that clamps down, does not soften? Wisdom is your own mistakes giving you a reach-around, so yes. HTH Ted ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness (was: Emacs Wiki Revision History) [not found] ` <mailman.1985.1224837085.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-24 10:14 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-24 11:15 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness Paul R 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-24 10:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On 24 Okt., 10:31, Paul R <paul.r...@gmail.com> wrote: > But making emacs more accessible to the newcomers is a whole project > in itself. Emacswiki, in spite of its relative mess, is clearly a step > in this direction. Though, I'm afraid there is not so much room for > improvement in this area as long as core developers show constant > reluctance to change the defaults of emacs, which are most of this > high, rough, wall. You are right. If you look around Emacs Wiki, you'll notice that there's a set of pages reachable from the SiteMap that is geared towards newbies. It tells them how the wiki works, how to navigate, how to search, how to learn Emacs, and so on. Most of this area is the work of Drew Adams. It is this kind of effort that is required. Thank you, Drew Adams! I hang out on #emacs a lot. Whenever there's an Emacs related question that has no answer on the wiki, I try to write a wiki page instead of just answering it. Or if I cannot I'll give the person whatever help I can and tell them to put the solution on a wiki once they figured it out. Sometimes that works. It's a way of growing the wiki in directions that people actually use. On #emacs, we also have a bot called fsbot, who knows the names of all Emacs Wiki pages, it knows all the names of the manual nodes, and it has a lot of user-level redirections and cross references. Together, fsbot and the wiki make a very impressive team. I guess that Google and the wiki should be equally good, but since I rarely google for my Emacs problems, I can't tell. My point is that looking at the Emcs Wiki on its own might be short- selling it. It often works as a text resource for other services -- web search, IRC bots, and maybe mailing lists and newsgroups. It has been a long time since I posted a lot on gnu.emacs.help... :) Oh and one last thing: Some defaults were in fact changed in Emacs 23. I was confused. But I'm willing to make that sacrifice if it attracts some new users to Emacs. Let's hope we're on the right track. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-24 10:14 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness (was: Emacs Wiki Revision History) Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-24 11:15 ` Paul R 2008-10-24 18:21 ` Lennart Borgman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Paul R @ 2008-10-24 11:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Schroeder; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs Hello Alex, Alex> You are right. If you look around Emacs Wiki, you'll notice that Alex> there's a set of pages reachable from the SiteMap that is geared Alex> towards newbies. It tells them how the wiki works, how to Alex> navigate, how to search, how to learn Emacs, and so on. Most of Alex> this area is the work of Drew Adams. It is this kind of effort Alex> that is required. Thank you, Drew Adams! Yes, thank you Drew for constantly trying to look through newbies eyes. It often gives good results. Alex> My point is that looking at the Emcs Wiki on its own might be Alex> short- selling it. It often works as a text resource for other Alex> services -- web search, IRC bots, and maybe mailing lists and Alex> newsgroups. Yes, the content in EmacsWiki is very valuable. Yet, I undertand there is room for improvement for finding documentation, and putting in in shape to ease learning. But the most we talk about it, the more I think it would be best as a separate project, working collaboratively with emacswiki, picking some precious informations and putting them in shape to provide information in a more comprehensive shape for external readers. Alex> It has been a long time since I posted a lot on Alex> gnu.emacs.help... :) and I'm glad to read your posts. Alex> Oh and one last thing: Some defaults were in fact changed in Alex> Emacs 23. I was confused. But I'm willing to make that sacrifice Alex> if it attracts some new users to Emacs. Let's hope we're on the Alex> right track. Yes, some. Obviously emacs 23 will have some improvements in this area, but it is hardly enough to qualify emacs as a friendly tool for beginners. Also, I would bet you can revert your copy of emacs to the old beloved behaviour in a matter of seconds, just because you know what you want and you know how to set it up. That is why I don't see the point of preserving defaults to suit experienced users. Defaults, really, must strictly stick to what a *new* user expects, or at least to *common* usability guidelines. -- Paul ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-24 11:15 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness Paul R @ 2008-10-24 18:21 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-10-26 21:40 ` Paul R 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2008-10-24 18:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Paul R; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, Alex Schroeder On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 1:15 PM, Paul R <paul.r.ml@gmail.com> wrote: > Yes, the content in EmacsWiki is very valuable. Yet, I undertand there > is room for improvement for finding documentation, and putting in in > shape to ease learning. But the most we talk about it, the more > I think it would be best as a separate project, working > collaboratively with emacswiki, picking some precious informations and > putting them in shape to provide information in a more comprehensive > shape for external readers. I think some people call that second project "Emacs" ;-) Why not work on improving the documentation inside the Emacs project along those lines? Or is there some problem doing that? Even if most of the documentation in Emacs are in Info format there are links to other documentation too, in html format. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-24 18:21 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-10-26 21:40 ` Paul R 2008-10-26 21:54 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Paul R @ 2008-10-26 21:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Borgman; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, Alex Schroeder Hello Lennart, Lennart> I think some people call that second project "Emacs" ;-) Lennart> Why not work on improving the documentation inside the Emacs Lennart> project along those lines? Or is there some problem doing Lennart> that? Even if most of the documentation in Emacs are in Info Lennart> format there are links to other documentation too, in html Lennart> format. For users, Emacs documentation state is bound to an emacs release. This documentation can't change between release, that is why this project would have slighlty different goal. But I agree, the flow of information could be : EmacsWiki ----> Online emacs documentation portal ----> Emacs Info -- Paul ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-26 21:40 ` Paul R @ 2008-10-26 21:54 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2008-10-26 21:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Paul R; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, Alex Schroeder On Sun, Oct 26, 2008 at 10:40 PM, Paul R <paul.r.ml@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello Lennart, > > Lennart> I think some people call that second project "Emacs" ;-) > > Lennart> Why not work on improving the documentation inside the Emacs > Lennart> project along those lines? Or is there some problem doing > Lennart> that? Even if most of the documentation in Emacs are in Info > Lennart> format there are links to other documentation too, in html > Lennart> format. > > For users, Emacs documentation state is bound to an emacs release. > This documentation can't change between release, that is why this > project would have slighlty different goal. > But I agree, the flow of information could be : > EmacsWiki ----> Online emacs documentation portal ----> Emacs Info I wonder if that could be enhanced in some way. Maybe it would be possible to contribute to Emacs Info for the next Emacs release and then link to that documentation from EmacsWiki? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-26 21:54 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Xavier Maillard @ 2008-10-30 23:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lennart Borgman; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, paul.r.ml, kensanata On Sun, Oct 26, 2008 at 10:40 PM, Paul R <paul.r.ml@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello Lennart, > > Lennart> I think some people call that second project "Emacs" ;-) > > Lennart> Why not work on improving the documentation inside the Emacs > Lennart> project along those lines? Or is there some problem doing > Lennart> that? Even if most of the documentation in Emacs are in Info > Lennart> format there are links to other documentation too, in html > Lennart> format. > > For users, Emacs documentation state is bound to an emacs release. > This documentation can't change between release, that is why this > project would have slighlty different goal. > But I agree, the flow of information could be : > EmacsWiki ----> Online emacs documentation portal ----> Emacs Info I wonder if that could be enhanced in some way. Maybe it would be possible to contribute to Emacs Info for the next Emacs release and then link to that documentation from EmacsWiki? How do you envision to do that practically ? Xavier -- http://www.gnu.org http://www.april.org http://www.lolica.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-26 21:40 ` Paul R 2008-10-26 21:54 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard 2008-11-04 18:05 ` Alex [not found] ` <mailman.2882.1225821941.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Xavier Maillard @ 2008-10-30 23:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Paul R; +Cc: kensanata, help-gnu-emacs Hello Lennart, Lennart> I think some people call that second project "Emacs" ;-) Lennart> Why not work on improving the documentation inside the Emacs Lennart> project along those lines? Or is there some problem doing Lennart> that? Even if most of the documentation in Emacs are in Info Lennart> format there are links to other documentation too, in html Lennart> format. For users, Emacs documentation state is bound to an emacs release. This documentation can't change between release, that is why this project would have slighlty different goal. But I agree, the flow of information could be : EmacsWiki ----> Online emacs documentation portal ----> Emacs Info I pretty like this idea. We would have to get tag support in emacswiki to ease information retrieval process. I hope we could make this happen with the help of the emacswiki community. Xavier -- http://www.gnu.org http://www.april.org http://www.lolica.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard @ 2008-11-04 18:05 ` Alex [not found] ` <mailman.2882.1225821941.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex @ 2008-11-04 18:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Xavier Maillard; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, Paul R On Thu, Oct 30, 2008 at 5:25 PM, Xavier Maillard <xma@gnu.org> wrote: > EmacsWiki ----> Online emacs documentation portal ----> Emacs Info > > I pretty like this idea. We would have to get tag support in > emacswiki to ease information retrieval process. I hope we could > make this happen with the help of the emacswiki community. Tag support could be added to the wiki. I think a "forward index" would be even better, though. Currently our category pages work as such. They work just like menu pages for texinfo, and therefore it would be easy to translate a subset of pages into a texinfo fragment. In fact, many years ago, I had a script that translated the entire Emacs Wiki into a texinfo document. Eventually, however, I decided that it wasn't worth the effort to maintain. If you think otherwise, we could resurrect that piece of code. Part of the problem is that the code needs to write a wiki to texinfo rule for every wiki to HTML rule it has, and the wiki engine used allows users to plug in an unlimited amount of new rules. Before doing all that work, I would therefore like to get a pretty good idea of how useful this effort is. How would integration into Emacs itself work? What does emacs-devel say to this? Who will be responsible for maintenance? Who will act as a filter? Perhaps we'll have to introduce more tags to indicate which pages not to include (eg. CategoryHomepage?). Who will decided how to deal with images, how about mixed licenses of the resulting product (most text pages are FDL, most code pages are GPL), and so on. I'd love to see these organisational issues answered before writing any actual code. Also, I'll be checking my email rarely these days as I'm travelling in Costa Rica. ;) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness [not found] ` <mailman.2882.1225821941.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-11-04 21:10 ` Ted Zlatanov 2008-11-06 8:11 ` Reiner Steib 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Ted Zlatanov @ 2008-11-04 21:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Tue, 4 Nov 2008 12:05:34 -0600 Alex <kensanata@gmail.com> wrote: A> Tag support could be added to the wiki. I think a "forward index" A> would be even better, though. Currently our category pages work as A> such. They work just like menu pages for texinfo, and therefore it A> would be easy to translate a subset of pages into a texinfo fragment. A> In fact, many years ago, I had a script that translated the entire A> Emacs Wiki into a texinfo document. Eventually, however, I decided A> that it wasn't worth the effort to maintain. If you think otherwise, A> we could resurrect that piece of code. For Gnus specifically, we could use it to automatically pull the Gnus+GMail pages from the EmacsWiki into the manual periodically. Ted ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-11-04 21:10 ` Ted Zlatanov @ 2008-11-06 8:11 ` Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 8:48 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-11-06 23:08 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness tyler 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Reiner Steib @ 2008-11-06 8:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Tue, Nov 04 2008, Ted Zlatanov wrote: > For Gnus specifically, we could use it to automatically pull the > Gnus+GMail pages from the EmacsWiki into the manual periodically. As we don't have copyright assignments for the content on EmacsWiki, we cannot do this. Does EmacsWiki have a reliable history mechanism that allows to find out who has done a change? Bye, Reiner. -- ,,, (o o) ---ooO-(_)-Ooo--- | PGP key available | http://rsteib.home.pages.de/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-11-06 8:11 ` Reiner Steib @ 2008-11-06 8:48 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-11-06 20:29 ` Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs (was: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness) Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 23:08 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness tyler 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2008-11-06 8:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Reiner Steib; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 9:11 AM, Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: > On Tue, Nov 04 2008, Ted Zlatanov wrote: > >> For Gnus specifically, we could use it to automatically pull the >> Gnus+GMail pages from the EmacsWiki into the manual periodically. > > As we don't have copyright assignments for the content on EmacsWiki, > we cannot do this. Does EmacsWiki have a reliable history mechanism > that allows to find out who has done a change? I am not sure that is important since if something on EmacsWiki is to be included in Emacs it needs to be rewritten to fit into Emacs manual. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs (was: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness) 2008-11-06 8:48 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-11-06 20:29 ` Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 21:24 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-11-07 14:28 ` Ted Zlatanov 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Reiner Steib @ 2008-11-06 20:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Thu, Nov 06 2008, Lennart Borgman wrote: > On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 9:11 AM, Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: >> On Tue, Nov 04 2008, Ted Zlatanov wrote: >> >>> For Gnus specifically, we could use it to automatically pull the >>> Gnus+GMail pages from the EmacsWiki into the manual periodically. Beside the copyright issue, I would object to automatic inclusion because the quality and correctness of EmacsWiki pages isn't always sufficient. >> As we don't have copyright assignments for the content on EmacsWiki, >> we cannot do this. Does EmacsWiki have a reliable history mechanism >> that allows to find out who has done a change? > > I am not sure that is important since if something on EmacsWiki is to > be included in Emacs it needs to be rewritten to fit into Emacs > manual. AFAIK, that doesn't matter. Bye, Reiner. -- ,,, (o o) ---ooO-(_)-Ooo--- | PGP key available | http://rsteib.home.pages.de/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs (was: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness) 2008-11-06 20:29 ` Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs (was: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness) Reiner Steib @ 2008-11-06 21:24 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-11-06 22:14 ` Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs Reiner Steib 2008-11-07 14:28 ` Ted Zlatanov 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2008-11-06 21:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Reiner Steib; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 9:29 PM, Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: >>> As we don't have copyright assignments for the content on EmacsWiki, >>> we cannot do this. Does EmacsWiki have a reliable history mechanism >>> that allows to find out who has done a change? >> >> I am not sure that is important since if something on EmacsWiki is to >> be included in Emacs it needs to be rewritten to fit into Emacs >> manual. > > AFAIK, that doesn't matter. What do you mean? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs 2008-11-06 21:24 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-11-06 22:14 ` Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 23:11 ` Lennart Borgman [not found] ` <mailman.3026.1226017071.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Reiner Steib @ 2008-11-06 22:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Thu, Nov 06 2008, Lennart Borgman wrote: > On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 9:29 PM, Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: >>>> As we don't have copyright assignments for the content on EmacsWiki, >>>> we cannot do this. [...] >>> >>> I am not sure that is important since if something on EmacsWiki is to >>> be included in Emacs it needs to be rewritten to fit into Emacs >>> manual. >> >> AFAIK, that doesn't matter. > > What do you mean? In general[1], in order to include non-trivial content[2] in Emacs, the author has to assign the copyright to the FSF. If we don't have an assignment, we cannot include it. I don't know what kind of rewriting your thinking about. If it's only adding texinfo markup and minor changes, then I think we still need an assignment from the original author.[3] Bye, Reiner. Footnotes: [1] there might be some exceptions [2] code or documentation [3] IANAL; I don't speak for the FSF; If you want to know for sure ask the FSF copyright clerk or on emacs-devel. -- ,,, (o o) ---ooO-(_)-Ooo--- | PGP key available | http://rsteib.home.pages.de/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs 2008-11-06 22:14 ` Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs Reiner Steib @ 2008-11-06 23:11 ` Lennart Borgman [not found] ` <mailman.3026.1226017071.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2008-11-06 23:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Reiner Steib; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 11:14 PM, Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: > On Thu, Nov 06 2008, Lennart Borgman wrote: > >> On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 9:29 PM, Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: >>>>> As we don't have copyright assignments for the content on EmacsWiki, >>>>> we cannot do this. [...] >>>> >>>> I am not sure that is important since if something on EmacsWiki is to >>>> be included in Emacs it needs to be rewritten to fit into Emacs >>>> manual. >>> >>> AFAIK, that doesn't matter. >> >> What do you mean? > > In general[1], in order to include non-trivial content[2] in Emacs, > the author has to assign the copyright to the FSF. If we don't have > an assignment, we cannot include it. > > I don't know what kind of rewriting your thinking about. If it's only > adding texinfo markup and minor changes, then I think we still need an > assignment from the original author.[3] Thanks, I see. My idea was to let someone who have signed FSF papers for contributing to Emacs do the rewriting. I meant a complete rewrite using the ideas from the EmacsWiki pages, but not directly the content itself. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs [not found] ` <mailman.3026.1226017071.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-11-08 19:00 ` Rupert Swarbrick 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Rupert Swarbrick @ 2008-11-08 19:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 673 bytes --] "Lennart Borgman" <lennart.borgman@gmail.com> writes: > My idea was to let someone who have signed FSF papers for contributing > to Emacs do the rewriting. I meant a complete rewrite using the ideas > from the EmacsWiki pages, but not directly the content itself. Are you sure that this doesn't already happen to some extent? I mean if I were a documentation writer and I saw something relevant to my software on a wiki, no doubt I'd be inclined to put that information in the documentation with the next edit I made. That said, I suppose that if I wrote a certain piece of emacs, I'd be unlikely to be browsing the emacswiki looking for examples about it. Hmm. Rupert [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 314 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs 2008-11-06 20:29 ` Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs (was: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness) Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 21:24 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-11-07 14:28 ` Ted Zlatanov 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Ted Zlatanov @ 2008-11-07 14:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Thu, 06 Nov 2008 21:29:58 +0100 Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: RS> On Thu, Nov 06 2008, Lennart Borgman wrote: >> On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 9:11 AM, Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> wrote: >>> On Tue, Nov 04 2008, Ted Zlatanov wrote: >>> >>>> For Gnus specifically, we could use it to automatically pull the >>>> Gnus+GMail pages from the EmacsWiki into the manual periodically. RS> Beside the copyright issue, I would object to automatic inclusion RS> because the quality and correctness of EmacsWiki pages isn't always RS> sufficient. I understand. Technically it's possible but that doesn't make it a good idea. Ted ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-11-06 8:11 ` Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 8:48 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2008-11-06 23:08 ` tyler 2008-11-07 7:32 ` Paul R 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: tyler @ 2008-11-06 23:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Reiner Steib <reinersteib+gmane@imap.cc> writes: > > As we don't have copyright assignments for the content on EmacsWiki, > we cannot do this. Does EmacsWiki have a reliable history mechanism > that allows to find out who has done a change? > The wiki is licensed under GPL 2, according to the footer on each page. This being the case, what's to stop anyone from lifting content for inclusion in other documents with compatible licenses? If such activity actually requires individual contributors actively assigning copyright, then the footer is wrong and needs to be corrected. Personally, I have always assumed that material I provide on any wiki is subject to a Free license. Wikipedia is GFDL, and they've never requested a copyright assignment from me. If that's not the case for the EmacsWiki it should be stated clearly somewhere. Cheers, Tyler -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-11-06 23:08 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness tyler @ 2008-11-07 7:32 ` Paul R 2008-11-07 13:23 ` tyler 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Paul R @ 2008-11-07 7:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: tyler; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs tyler> This being the case, what's to stop anyone from lifting content tyler> for inclusion in other documents with compatible licenses? As far as emacs code is concerned, the FSF wants the code to be under a free licence, but it also wants to hold the copyright. Why ? Because the FSF makes new licences on a constant basis, ans only the copyright owner is allowed to change the licence. tyler> If such activity actually requires individual contributors tyler> actively assigning copyright, then the footer is wrong and needs tyler> to be corrected. No, the footer is right, GPLV2 is all about distribution permissions, not about copyright holding, which is the real problem I suspect. But I'm not sure, anybody to confirm that the FSF applies the same policy for documentation ? -- Paul ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness 2008-11-07 7:32 ` Paul R @ 2008-11-07 13:23 ` tyler 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: tyler @ 2008-11-07 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Paul R <paul.r.ml@gmail.com> writes: > tyler> This being the case, what's to stop anyone from lifting content > tyler> for inclusion in other documents with compatible licenses? > > As far as emacs code is concerned, the FSF wants the code to be under > a free licence, but it also wants to hold the copyright. Why ? Because > the FSF makes new licences on a constant basis, ans only the copyright > owner is allowed to change the licence. > Given that the Emacs Wiki expressly allows that the recipient "may choose to receive this work under any other license that grants the right to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute the work, as long as that license imposes the restriction that derivative works have to grant the same rights and impose the same restriction" The FSF would have to come up with a new license that is a drastic departure from conventional copyleft to violate this condition. Still, I'm beyond the limit of my legal understanding, so that's probably a good time to stop. Cheers, Tyler -- Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing. --Wernher von Braun ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1662.1224576628.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-21 18:34 ` Xah 2008-10-21 19:01 ` Xah 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Xah @ 2008-10-21 18:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Oct 21, 1:04 am, Alex Schroeder <a...@gnu.org> wrote: > Xah<xahlee <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > for the love of emacs community, please suggest to it's creator Alex > > Schroeder to switch the emacs wiki's software to MediaWiki as the wiki > > software, instead of his pet of 4k line of perl OddMuse that doesn't > > use a real database. > > Don't waste your time. :) > > > I have been thinking for a while for doing this ... register a domain, > > install MediaWiki, and copy emacswiki.org content over. > > > whoever does this do emacs community a service. > > Please do. I invite you to set up a suitable site and when you're done, invite > people voice their opinion. I'm not married to emacswiki.org – if somebody else > will do a better job, I'll gladly hand it over. > > Start here and pick your starting point:http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/WikiDownload > > The SVN repository will give you the raw wiki pages and no history. The Rsync > repository will give you everything including the log files. Thank you for the blessing! Xah ∑ http://xahlee.org/ ☄ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-21 18:34 ` Emacs Wiki Revision History Xah @ 2008-10-21 19:01 ` Xah 2008-10-23 11:05 ` Alex Schroeder 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Xah @ 2008-10-21 19:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Oct 21, 11:34 am, Xah <xah...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Oct 21, 1:04 am, Alex Schroeder <a...@gnu.org> wrote: > > > > >Xah<xahlee <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > > for the love of emacs community, please suggest to it's creator Alex > > > Schroeder to switch the emacs wiki's software to MediaWiki as the wiki > > > software, instead of his pet of 4k line of perl OddMuse that doesn't > > > use a real database. > > > Don't waste your time. :) > > > > I have been thinking for a while for doing this ... register a domain, > > > install MediaWiki, and copy emacswiki.org content over. > > > > whoever does this do emacs community a service. > > > Please do. I invite you to set up a suitable site and when you're done, invite > > people voice their opinion. I'm not married to emacswiki.org – if somebody else > > will do a better job, I'll gladly hand it over. > > > Start here and pick your starting point:http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/WikiDownload > > > The SVN repository will give you the raw wiki pages and no history. The Rsync > > repository will give you everything including the log files. > > Thank you for the blessing! PS i should've mentioned in previous post, Alex, you really should be the one. You already started it, and it has become a very useful website. I am somewhat familiar with your knowledge in sql and elisp and perl. I think it would take just a day, if you wanted to, to switch it to MediaWiki. That is to say, i don't think tech know-how is in the way. I do think switching to MediaWiki is a major benefit, and thank you for starting emacswiki in the first place. Xah ∑ http://xahlee.org/ ☄ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-21 19:01 ` Xah @ 2008-10-23 11:05 ` Alex Schroeder 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 11:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Oct 21, 9:01 pm, Xah <xah...@gmail.com> wrote: > PS i should've mentioned in previous post, Alex, you really should be > the one. You already started it, and it has become a very useful > website. I am somewhat familiar with your knowledge in sql and elisp > and perl. I think it would take just a day, if you wanted to, to > switch it to MediaWiki. That is to say, i don't think tech know-how is > in the way. I do think switching to MediaWiki is a major benefit, and > thank you for starting emacswiki in the first place. Unfortunately, that is not true at all. I've been to various wiki symposiums and I've spoken to the main developers of many wiki engines including the guys from Mediawiki and Dokuwiki. I know of performance issues, scaling issues, caching issues, proxy issues, text formatting rule incompatibility, and so on. This is a step in the wrong direction from my perspective. And it's a huge effort as far as I can tell. I'm not going to invest a single second for this perceived loss of value. I'm just posting my reactions here in the hopes of silencing any speculations and spelling out what future volunteers will need to consider. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History 2008-10-20 17:58 ` Xah 2008-10-21 8:04 ` Alex Schroeder [not found] ` <mailman.1662.1224576628.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-22 0:25 ` Xavier Maillard 2 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Xavier Maillard @ 2008-10-22 0:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Xah; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs Hi, petOn Oct 20, 3:54 am, Volkan YAZICI <volkan.yaz...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > While I was looking at revision histories of some of the pages in > emacs wiki[1], unfortunately saw that most of the entries are lost. > (The oldest history record appears something similar to "UTC Revision > 10 . . . . 146.124.141.59 Rollback to 2008-09-05 00:16 UTC".) Is > this something to be recovered in a near future, or totally lost? > > Regards. > > [1]http://www.emacswiki.org/ for the love of emacs community, please suggest to it's creator Alex Schroeder to switch the emacs wiki's software to MediaWiki as the wiki software, instead of his pet of 4k line of perl OddMuse that doesn't use a real database. Now I am sure, you are a dumb troll. MediaWiki is by no mean what I would recommend for a replacement (if even needed) for the current EmacsWiki community. Doing so is unlikely to serve anybody but you. At the very least, you could try to enhance OddMuse by sending patches. You could even try to contribute to EmacsWiki before trying to put your hands on it. Cheers, Xavier -- http://www.gnu.org http://www.april.org http://www.lolica.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
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* Re: Emacs Wiki Revision History [not found] ` <mailman.1578.1224505841.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2008-10-23 14:13 ` Alex Schroeder 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Alex Schroeder @ 2008-10-23 14:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Oct 20, 2:30 pm, Nikolaj Schumacher <m...@nschum.de> wrote: > IIRC, the Emacs wiki saves only a limited history due to resource > constrains. I thought I had answered that but it's not showing up, so let me repost that. The reason I'm expiring old revisions is not resource constraints. It's a conscious decisions made based on some thoughts discussed in the early days of wiki. You can read more about it here: http://www.usemod.com/cgi-bin/mb.pl?KeptPages In short, the idea is that we want to forgive and forget, no be record keepers of other's mistakes. We don't need to support old versions of the code, and therefore we do not need access to all the old revisions. Our focus is on polishing the the current revision of the text. Cheers Alex ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2008-11-08 19:00 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 49+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2008-10-20 10:54 Emacs Wiki Revision History Volkan YAZICI 2008-10-20 12:30 ` Nikolaj Schumacher 2008-10-20 15:03 ` Drew Adams 2008-10-20 17:58 ` Xah 2008-10-21 8:04 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-21 12:04 ` ack [not found] ` <mailman.1709.1224598815.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-21 18:55 ` Xah 2008-10-22 9:26 ` Paul R 2008-10-22 22:45 ` Bastien 2008-10-23 8:25 ` Xavier Maillard [not found] ` <mailman.1889.1224757773.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-23 11:10 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 8:25 ` Xavier Maillard [not found] ` <mailman.1856.1224715571.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-23 11:07 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 14:35 ` Bastien [not found] ` <mailman.1911.1224772552.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-23 22:06 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 22:53 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-10-24 2:54 ` Bastien [not found] ` <mailman.1968.1224816864.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-24 10:15 ` Alex Schroeder [not found] ` <mailman.1777.1224667634.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-23 11:00 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-23 20:43 ` Xah 2008-10-23 22:47 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-24 8:31 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness (was: Emacs Wiki Revision History) Paul R 2008-11-06 20:22 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness Thien-Thi Nguyen [not found] ` <mailman.3016.1226004497.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-11-07 14:27 ` Ted Zlatanov [not found] ` <mailman.1985.1224837085.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-24 10:14 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness (was: Emacs Wiki Revision History) Alex Schroeder 2008-10-24 11:15 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness Paul R 2008-10-24 18:21 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-10-26 21:40 ` Paul R 2008-10-26 21:54 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard 2008-10-30 23:25 ` Xavier Maillard 2008-11-04 18:05 ` Alex [not found] ` <mailman.2882.1225821941.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-11-04 21:10 ` Ted Zlatanov 2008-11-06 8:11 ` Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 8:48 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-11-06 20:29 ` Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs (was: Emacs, oldsters, newbiness) Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 21:24 ` Lennart Borgman 2008-11-06 22:14 ` Including content from EmacsWiki in Emacs Reiner Steib 2008-11-06 23:11 ` Lennart Borgman [not found] ` <mailman.3026.1226017071.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-11-08 19:00 ` Rupert Swarbrick 2008-11-07 14:28 ` Ted Zlatanov 2008-11-06 23:08 ` Emacs, oldsters, newbiness tyler 2008-11-07 7:32 ` Paul R 2008-11-07 13:23 ` tyler [not found] ` <mailman.1662.1224576628.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-21 18:34 ` Emacs Wiki Revision History Xah 2008-10-21 19:01 ` Xah 2008-10-23 11:05 ` Alex Schroeder 2008-10-22 0:25 ` Xavier Maillard [not found] ` <mailman.1578.1224505841.25473.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2008-10-23 14:13 ` Alex Schroeder
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