The interesting thing about the new site is that it is entirely hosted
in Github, making it easy for other people to work on it, and to
access to the latest git data. This is used for instance with the
viewer: http://kanjivg.tagaini.net/viewer.html?kanji=%E7%B7%9A
The issues are also handled with Github issues instead of an editable
Wiki page: https://github.com/Gnurou/kanjivg/issues It makes much more
sense as every issue can now have its discussion. On the other hand
contributors must have a Github account - but that should only be a
minor drawback.
So thanks Axel for your continuous efforts in putting my web design
non-skills to shame. There are many fun things that could come out of
this: a more advanced viewer, on-line stroke order animations, or even
maybe a visual Javascript editor that would commit to a contributor's
branch and fill in a merge request. We will see where it can go, but
this is already a great step in the right direction.
Alex.