<font face="courier new,monospace">While wikis, blogs, and other social networking phenomena may be great for personal empowerment and self-esteem, not everyone can who wants to write can write. It often seems to me that there is this illusion that wikis in particular are self-organizing, self-correcting organisms requiring very little maintenance, and that newcomers will be able to navigate them with the same facility as the veterans. While efforts like Wikipedia have been largely successful, it is in part due to the limited nature of the individual pages. A page on any given topic will likely link to quite a number of other pages, but should be able to stand on its own as a complete (if not necessarily deep) entry. Brevity, in this case being more than merely the soul of wit.</font><div>
<font face="courier new,monospace"><br></font></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'courier new', monospace; ">In addition, determining what a user will use as a search term is easier with sites that are more focused on who, what, where and when. The problem for groups like Sugar Labs (and several other sites) is that people often come looking for how, and why which, in my opinion, are harder to pin down into simple searches. People are rarely looking for an elaborate definition or a history. More often they're looking for a set of instructions, a roadmap, a recipe, an answer. Users also need a logical sequence from simple to advanced, if for example, they want to learn to create activities. What are the prerequisites and where should users find them?</span></div>
<div><font face="courier new,monospace"><br></font></div><div><font face="courier new,monospace">Who is the audience? How do you steer different audiences to the most appropriate information, both in terms of their needs and their skills / knowledge? Is there a process for certifying information as not only accurate, but "stable", or for those who prefer,a way to find only the bleeding-edge unstable tidbits?</font></div>
<div><font face="courier new,monospace"><br></font></div><div><font face="courier new,monospace">As for your template, it's one of many models that could work. Personally, I'd like a section early on that states the problem(s) before offering the solution(s). What's out on the page right now is a nice statement, but "Why should I invest the time, energy, and 'emotional trauma' to try out this thingie?" followed rapidly by "OK... HOW should I invest my time, energy, etc in trying out this thingie?"</font></div>
<div><font face="courier new,monospace"><br></font></div><div><font face="courier new,monospace"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: arial; "><div><font class="Apple-style-span" face="'courier new', monospace">Too often the response to some question is "Well, join yet another mailing list. Subscribe to yet another blog." Who has the time? The web should get me to the best answer with the least amount of fuss, otherwise it becomes millions of channels with nothing "good to watch" -- sorta like reality TV. ;-)</font></div>
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