I think it would really great for our community if we moved our discussions to a real modern forum like Discourse, as Python and many other communities have already done.This post from the Python forum gives some explanations of the particular benefits/features of Discourse, though it is in response to someone comparing it to a simple mailing list.But some of the greatest features that they don't mention there which I think would really benefit our community are:
- Easy refactoring of forum threads! Moderators can easily move off-topic posts to a new thread, so the current topic can be kept focused, without losing any contributions. This is for me a feature that sets Discourse apart from any other forum software (and I've looked at many).
- Easy creation of polls!
Though there are probably many more that I even yet don't know.I stongly feel that we have to move forward as a Team and Discourse could be a game changer in many ways.
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in https://groups.google.com/d/msg/leo-editor/oQwOLKtiAlg/XfKuuBhUBgAJ Xavier recommended using Discourse instead of Google Groups for Leo discussion:
I see two major challenges:(a) Free hosting for open source projects must be applied for and is reviewed on a case by case basis. Leo has a small community so might not fit "a tool to host discussion at scale". Self hosting would cost ~$60 USD/yr + setup, and someone would need to commit to maintaining it for the long haul.
(b) The Google Group has a lot of history and is a major resource when answering questions. I wouldn't want to talk about things in one place and research in another. There is conflicting info on whether the free hosting supports imports (I've asked for clarification).
(b) The Google Group has a lot of history and is a major resource when answering questions. I wouldn't want to talk about things in one place and research in another. There is conflicting info on whether the free hosting supports imports (I've asked for clarification).Why do we care about imports?
Hi,
The idea of using another platform, instead of mailing list, has
arrived locally from time to time. FYI we have considered
NimForum[1] because of its simplicity and because we would like to
deploy and migrate data in an easy way in case of being necessary.
But for now, we still keep the mailing list and no migration has
been done.
[1] https://github.com/nim-lang/nimforum
Cheers,
Offray
(b) The Google Group has a lot of history and is a major resource when answering questions. I wouldn't want to talk about things in one place and research in another. There is conflicting info on whether the free hosting supports imports (I've asked for clarification).
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I am currently looking at Flarum which seems to be a better fit than Discourse. More eyes and thoughts would be good.Sign in and I will make you an admin if you want to evaluate it.
Not for nothing, but every time anybody switches from email to
some closed, web-based service, membership & traffic drops off
tremendously (even with email notifications). People continue to
use email lists because they work. Nothing works as well as a
good email list, with a searchable archive. My advice: Don't.
Just don't.
(spoken as someone who hosts a bunch of email lists - Sympa is my platform of choice)
Miles Fidelman
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-- In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is. .... Yogi Berra Theory is when you know everything but nothing works. Practice is when everything works but no one knows why. In our lab, theory and practice are combined: nothing works and no one knows why. ... unknown
every time anybody switches from email to some closed, web-based service, membership & traffic drops off tremendously (even with email notifications). People continue to use email lists because they work. Nothing works as well as a good email list, with a searchable archive. My advice: Don't. Just don't.
every time anybody switches from email to some closed, web-based service, membership & traffic drops off tremendously (even with email notifications). People continue to use email lists because they work. Nothing works as well as a good email list, with a searchable archive. My advice: Don't. Just don't.
Thanks for this advice. Any comments?
People continue to use email lists because they work. Nothing works as well as a good email list, with a searchable archive. My advice: Don't. Just don't.
Thanks for this advice. Any comments?Mile's observation is valid and real.
Google Groups works as well as it does because we can choose to use email client or browser editor, and switch back and forth at whim. Though I almost always use browser to 'talk' I still keep my email subscription active, so I have a personal backup in the event Groups is inaccessible, temporarily or permanent.
My chief attractions to Discourse are:
- the prospect of being able to refactor and split threads, while keeping them linked
- Being able to edit posts, like wiki
- Liking posts, creating a signal people can use for understanding how important that idea is to the community
- Excellent browser editor
- Web experience in general is better and smoother than any other other forum I've used (inc. Google Groups)
- Track record of the lead developer (a primary creator of Stack Overflow).
I tried and failed to sign up for discourse. There is an email fallback.
Has anyone tried to register before? If not, I'll register via email.
I am currently looking at Flarum which seems to be a better fit than Discourse. More eyes and thoughts would be good.Sign in and I will make you an admin if you want to evaluate it.
I successfully registered using the same Google account I use for Leo Google Groups some years ago. What's exactly the problem that you have during registration?
Hey ChrisGeorge!
admin made a post in a discussion you're following: Testing the Editor
To view the new activity, check out the following link:
https://leoeditor.flarum.cloud/d/3/8
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So I broke my leg this morning.
Since I will have a fair bit of downtime coming up I would be happy to work on the import/backup to see what can be done.Edward, would you like me to apply and get started?
So I broke my leg this morning.
Since I will have a fair bit of downtime coming up I would be happy to work on the import/backup to see what can be done.
Edward, would you like me to apply and get started?
I think we should not ask just Edward, but the whole community. 😃
Actually, I am thinking that we should just stick with Leo's existing forum and issue tracker. I don't see any major benefits to changing how we communicate.Edward
Leo is a PIM, IDE and outliner that accelerates the work flow of programmers, authors and web designers.
"Leo is a revolutionary step in the right direction for programming."―Brian Takita"Leo is the best IDE that I have had the pleasure to use. It has totally changed not only the way that I program, but also the way that I store and organize all of the information that I need for the job that I do."―Ian Mulvany
Discourse and similar tools are doing the same for communication and community building.
“It’s really oriented towards community and considering that in 4 months since I started the forum I got over 20k posts and a lot of active and engaged members I can say it’s doing just that.”
—Johnny, mpsocial.com
“Our Discourse forum is the epicenter of our community. We have been active on social media (facebook, twitter, etc) for a few years and as our community grew significantly, we realized we needed a more flexible medium to engage with our users. We tried a few alternatives and nothing came close to Discourse in term of encouraging healthy and constructive discussion despite a very passionate and diverse audience.”
—Philippe, Infinite Flight
“Having a forum allows us to do a number of community centric things: run contests, talk strategy, facilitate fan art, report/resolve bugs, talk about player feedback and feature suggestions, and discuss updates. Ultimately, it helps us build a stronger identity as a community-first developer, since we are able to foster stronger connections with individual community members and the community as a whole through our activity there.”
—Gordon, Proletariat
“The wide range of Discourse tools, as well as its intelligence that comes out of the box, made it possible for our community to thrive — despite the fact that the number of potential users is very limited. I run an online community of Ukrainian goat keepers. (…) I DO believe that one of the key factors in achieving our goals was and still is using Discourse. (…) Discourse is worth the effort and time you spend on learning its features. Your productivity will boost. You will be able to do much more with fewer team members compared to other discussion engines. JUST USE IT.”
—Anton, Kozovod.com
“I want to point out how much of a difference the Discourse app makes. I used to engage on Discourse mobile once a week or so, no more. I am now doing probably half of my interactions with Discourse on mobile, day in day out, both posts and pageviews. Most of our power users have picked up the app too.”
—Michel
“I was a fan of Discourse before, but now I’m an evangelist! This kind of support can only come from people who care deeply about online communities, what they stand for, and why they matter.”
—Tiago
“We’ve been using googlegroups for a long time for a software support forum and I was happy enough - it was easy, “did the job” and compared to the various BB options I didn’t feel the need to switch. Having spent a few days now using Discourse I’m blown away. There are so many neat, useful features in here, without it feeling overwhelming and bloated. I keep coming and finding another thing that it does “right” and I just keep getting happier!”
—Jon
"It’s a space for all coworkers to discuss, be it current methodology, philosophy, vision or strategy. We also love shared knowledge through best practices, new tools and the best ideas around. (…) All the conversation that matters and deserves a calm space to be on lives in Discourse. Everything else, the quick and inconsequential things, go to Slack."
—David, GoodRebels
My best wishes to all!
Xavier
So I broke my leg this morning.
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The biggest downside to email lists is formatting the messages. Plain text is good, but code, images, proper indentation etc. is better.
Hi,
My approach here is different and kind of choosing the underdog:
Fossil, Nim, Pharo, Leo, instead of more popular tools. Not
because of "underdogness" itself, but because this provides me a
particular view point and agility where still few people is
located, so the idea/practice to inspiration and signal to noise
ratio is less and I can move faster in a better flow.
Our popular tech culture enjoys incidental complexity and
constant struggle against flow by choosing, deploying and
maintaining over complex tools. The issue is that once the
decision has been made for a popular over complex tool, the
technical debt starts. You can win from scale economies, but you
loose in agility. Moving a popular huge culture is pretty
demanding.
First decisions are the more difficult ones, because after taken,
we need to be compatible with our own past.
Cheers,
Offray
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