Mike,
I'm coming from the perspective of being an engineer but also having marketing and some automotive journalism experience. You might not of guessed with my many typos. I'm seeing the suggestion of a WikiBook as not focused on immediate market results. Wikipedia is for many a first briefing on something in this case MINIX3.
A WikiBook is something that's needed. It should become an often used reference by system integrators, software developers, and those improving MINIX3. A WikiBook by this description has a long development time-frame. It is expected to be updated through out its lifetime. Updates being one cool feature of online books.
MINIX3 needs understandable articles that explain its workings in terms of applications. I think MINIX3 has much potential but more people need to read about it. Articles that help readers evaluate MINIX3 or better try it are a step forward. Academic papers will continue to play key technical development roles.
Since the paper is copyrighted, the author(s) can choose to place it into the public domain. One option is the Creative Commons licensing with attribution. You can choose to use cover the same issues with a new article with original work.
Reading that article I can see other ways to explain MINIX3's underlying concepts in a more popular format yet a technical way. This is a form of marketing.
Marketing using Wikipedia is balancing act. A similar balance is needed for most social media networks. Well in this case means that the Wikipedia articles need to fit that culture and policies. Doing that gives readers more confidence about the presented information. It's about emotions.
If done well, a revised MINIX3 Wikipedia article could become an often referenced item. This drives the "page rank" in search engines much higher.
These remarks are intended to broaden the communications from the MINIX3 community.
My current project is a MINIX3 embedded demonstrator using the Beagleboard XM. The XM has several revisions requiring a number of variants in some software details. New boards are appearing using ARMs CPUs that are candidates for MINIX3. I just happen to have an XM and therefore only requires my sweat-labor to get it working.
Cheers,
John S Wolter
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LinkedIn: johnswolter
johnswolter [at] wolterworks [dot] c-o-m
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