On Wed, 2006-09-06 at 16:21 -0700, Alan Dayley wrote: > On Wed, September 6, 2006 3:23 pm, Mike Schwartz wrote: > > > > I may not be [completely] keeping up, here (sorry), > > but I thought that ("allow members to contribute to the site") > > was what a wiki was for; > > (also, an archive of the mail lists, such as this one...) > > just 0.02, ...from: > > Wikis are great for user contribution. You are correct. I don't remember > all whys for it back whenever but we determined that something between > static HTML and a wiki would serve better. > > Joomla! (http://www.joomla.org) is a Content Management System (CMS) that > allows control over content and structure while allowing contributions > from many people. The way PLUG uses it was untented to provide the > following conceptual operation: > > - Every user who registers is set to "Author" access level. > - All Authors are allowed to submit new articles, links, reviews, etc. > - Then, a team of "Publishers," a least two for each section, would review > submissions for content and appropriateness. > - Right away or perhaps after a few revisions with the Author, they would > Publish the submission to the site for all to see. > - Articles would be submitted. > - Admin work would be handled by a team of people. > - Everyone has the opportunity to contribute. > - Spam and inappropriate content is vetted. > - All is right with the world. > > The reality that has turned out is: > > - Every user who registers is set to "Author" access level. > - All Authors are allowed to submit new articles, links, reviews, etc. > - A team of "Publishers" was started but faded away for whatever reason. > - Articles and other content are rarely submitted, consisting mostly of > job postings. > - Admin work is done by me, which I neglect from time to time. > - Everyone has the opportunity to contribute but very few do. > - Spam and inappropriate content is vetted. (Easy with few submissions.) > - The site goes stale and has little content beyond meeting announcements. > > Based on this experience, and assuming that past performance indicates > future results, I'd say a wiki would get a flurry of contributions for a > few months and then fall into staleness and meeting announcements. Maybe > I am wrong about that but there currently is no clamor for submitting > content. I don't think changing the submission process will have that > much of an effect. ---- I think the focus wasn't clear and the objectives muddy. Most activity tends to occur at the project level whereas PLUG is a regional and not project centric. So it seems that much of the content isn't gonna reach the wider audience. I think it needs to focus on things like... - regional events - regional news - regional blogs / and perhaps blogs is the one area where there could be a lot of interest/activity As for the dog and pony shows known as East Side / West Side meetings...that's been done for so many years that it's a somewhat tired format that isn't going to draw a lot of people to them. I hate to come off as negative because I don't want to discourage anyone nor diminish their efforts. Craig --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss