RE: Wiki -- We don't have a lot of engagement
Yo,
These responses are out of order, as I respond to severity and not the order of the topics (all of this is opinion with a few recommendations), but the topic responses should be clear to follow:
I thought I did give more than "it needs to be changed" by suggesting the root taxonny be changed to System Information/Specs, Tutorials, and Articles (perhaps also Software). Articles can cover info on specific perherials or add-on hardware. I don't think we need a dedicated hardware section as it's too ambiguous. If I wasn't clear, my fault, I was trying to show an image/approach, I didn't have a prefab solution out of the gate. Hopefully the above gives clarity.
The suggested (above) basic roots would replace the current root of "Emulation, Hardware, OS, Peripherals, Policies, Programming, Projects, Subsystems and Applications, Tutorials" (As one can see many of these are sub-topics of neighboring sections: e.g. Emulation, OS, Programming, Applications all fall under Software (Subsystems and Applications). Also Peripherals already falls under Hardware. So that's a starting place for my suggestion. We can compact but also change from identification-style index terms to terms that fit the user/views goal on the wiki. They are searching, maybe not browsing.
In regards to tunnel vision, absolutely! I don't pay any attention to tabs at the top of a page once I click forums...literally didn't even see the wiki tab because it's not a place I really ever went. So yeah, personal failing, but nonetheless true.
In regards to the suggested topics of the articles I mentioned, I think you may have a bit of a unconscious bias on this. While some people might be lucky, most aren't, most start out on Indigo, Indy, Indigo2 systems - as they are cheaper. I did, I didn't even get a system higher than Indigo2 for 4 years (O2 R5200) and then 7 years after the O2, I got Tezros. So starting out on an Octane, that's like having a sports car as your first car, most of us didn't get to learn on one, we had to start with an older/lesser model of car. With SGIs you get what you can, so the education needs of the older systems may perhaps impact a larger subset of collectors then you might think. it's still required knowledge for certain scenarios on newer SGIs as well.
We all love to talk about our higher-end systems. But I have those same older systems I got 20+ years ago and someday somelese will get to enjoy them too. So I think basic education on the technology and setup of the time is in fact more paramount as it's the foundation of later models. I do understand you personally not wanting to take that on, that's not my main point anyway. I'm merely suggesting a technical base of articles that "train-up" a user for handing SGIs, it's a harder technique but then it's a foundation that be utilized as a springboard. If we as a group decided on say 3-4 foundational topics as articles, we could attempt a communal editing/adding of content with a few people trying to tackle cohesion/voice after all the info is present.
In regards to the fact that you've had to do rewrites, that only proves my point, you have to have a gatekeeper and that's a huge funnel of work, consistent voice as well. Personally I find a lot of good info on the preterhuman wiki, info that I didn't see anywhere else once Neko went down. I'm glad it's there and I don't expect a college-level dissertation of each article (as long as the grammar and spelling are checked). And that's exactly what I'm suggesting. Get the info onto you platform first, then you can rewrite it to whatever/whenever. But if you create a barrier of writing standards, the info doesn't appear.
I do not mind the copies of Neko threads at all, yes - some need pruning to remove topics that don't go anywhere. But the core info is there and I can follow it...versus gone. I won't push the issue, but just restating, but I feel that being able to take a thread's raw text encoding, create some kind of basic translation/markup conversion application and dump a thread's text into a wiki page with basic markup already there (basically images and quotes) would allow you to radically accelerate the inflow of good, pertinent information, that at least has some structure already. It can then be chopped, altered, or even rewritten at the later date. But for now it's like cutting out a newspaper article and storing it in your personal binder. You can always do whatever with it later, but now it's saved, titled, organized for retrieval (based on value/topic). You could argue that search works the same, however there are times I search for something and cannot find it, due to the title and missing meta descriptions not having the terminology I would think to use in the posting. But with a saved thread as a article, that can be fixed with a title, summation, perhaps some tags? It's sectional, structured, actionable information that otherwise gets buried. The form does need work...but I think it would be less work then rewriting everything (assuming you had the basic translation markup system going for formatting and inline images).
If "Irix 101" was the article I wanted (I'll assume you are referring to "Irix Setup 101"- I just took a peek right now, didn't know it existed), it's poorly named and that's why I skipped it, not trying to be hurtful, just truthful. I'm looking at descriptive labels to infer what's inside a posting. At least forum postings have a thought or complete sentence to give you the impression of what might be in there. To me, 101 class means basic info (about Irix and installing Irix), I was looking or terms like "Next steps after installing Irix", "Securing Irix", or perhaps something like the terms used in the wiki, "Customizing Irix". Though I do no like that term as it's too broad (covers several sub-topics) and doesn't tell me what might be in there. I'm literally judging a book by its cover, help me do that accurately.
Auctionable terms, this is why some online resources are so good, I can map a goal that tracks onto a set of terms (search) and it all comes together. I've never used a library system search, never used a card index, and always (whenever I had to go to a library) asked where the section is with the topic I wanted, then manually browsed through whatever they had (discovering tangents along the way) in that area. Because I view searching as a bird-eye view of what's available (marking interesting things) then I can come back to them. Rarely online do search terms perfectly line up, so I've learned to get as close as I can to the section, then just do an audit to find what I need. Jargon does help, but does not 100% fix the situation either.
As for the topic of the solution looking for the problem. How about (off the top of my head, they are stupid, because they aren't really wanted) - Modding an O2 case to fit a mATX motherboard PC, making fish tank of out an Onyx, making sofa ends out of two crimsons, using an RGB fan with custom arduino lighting inside an Octane, etc....yes these are slanted, I'm sure someone can think of other topics that similarly go against our wishes and waste our time.
In regards to your training others, do you have a tutorial on the Wiki about formatting/markup or writing? I'd like to at least know the basics myself of what formatting is available and how to do that. I don't know right now.
Either way I hope these addressed the concerns you raised, yes, many are my personal problem, if you find others don't agree, feel free to take it as one person's view but not helpful for the majority. I'm used to being told by others that nobody thinks this way, but this is how I operate and gain skills. I'm big into preserving info, if you can find a good technique/shortcut to engage and start pulling in more information, I'm all for it.
It's just that to me, I grew up reading articles and forums postings, so titles that tantalize skills or info draw me in and allow me to easily decide if that's something I'm going to read or not (did the title grab you). I'll even say the idea of an article summation next to the title would be great as well, to let perspective readers know what yo expect from this article
On a closing note, I really like IrixNet, I spend nearly all my online day here, I love the hardware and repair topics and I'd love to see more. As we discover things, I'd love for those to be documented into Wiki pages. I think we can do that for milestone efforts, but for the small things, I think perhaps a looser definition of a wiki article may need to exist for smaller topics.
You've created a great site and fostered a great group of people, you have something special, we all only want to help improve it and add our piece. So please view this with that understanding.
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