On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 3:15 PM, Tom Morris <
tfmo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Seth Woodworth <
se...@sethish.com> wrote:
>> 100% agree. We can't keep the activerepos.csv in the wiki, and since that
>> file is there, it makes sense to put the docs for adding books to the
>> spreadsheet in the parent repo. This means some docs are at
>> gitenberg-dev/wiki and some docs are at gitenberg-dev/wiki/wiki. Not a good
>> solution.
>
> Editing a wiki is a much lower barrier to entry for a contributor than
> learning how to manage git and make pull requests. If you would like
> non-geeks to contribute, it's something to keep in mind.
I do not think the project is really at a point where "non-geeks" are
a really valuable resource. The central idea is moving Gutenberg data
to a version controlled system, and assuming some familiarity with the
choosen system does not seem illogical at this point - and this is
gitenberg*-dev* documentation, not end user gitenberg documentation.
>>>
>>> My second suggestion is to find alternatives to google groups to host
>>> this mailing list. I had a really hard time with a slow connection to
>>> read all of the list - and it still is a very young and short list. I
>>> think that a project that intends to deliver free and open means to
>>> access free and open data should not rely on a provider which does not
>>> allow a minimum of freedom.
>>
>>
>> Google groups was easy/fast to set up. I am willing to migrate.
>>
>> The Internet Archive has hosted lists for other book projects I've worked
>> on via their Mailman install.
>> I expect they would be willing to host a list for this project. I will
>> ask!
>
>
> Mailman? Ugh! Talk about a mail archive interface from the 80s. And the
> Internet Archive rivals Google for insularity and lack of transparency, but
> I think choosing tooling based on perceived political considerations to be
> lower priority than making sure the team has what it needs to work
> efficiently.
One could also take your "from the 80s" argument to be a "perceived
political consideration". I, for one, have had obstacles to work
efficiently using google groups, and I have voiced it.
The argument about insularity and lack of transparency stand on its
own, but I have no comments on that, as I do not know IA.
> Why not just use MarkMail or Mail Archive to provide an easily searchable
> archive of the mailing list?
One important point to me, that I do not take as "perceived political
consideration", is the possibility to take out the data produced. I
need it now, because I cannot afford having to browse a web site every
time I have to re-read some group message, but more importantly it
should be kept even if the provider decides to stop providing the
service. In fact, I think I would be fine just having the list mails
forwarded to Mail Archive.
Cheers,
Tiago