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Re: Development news


From: Patrick Strasser
Subject: Re: Development news
Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2004 02:09:08 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.6b) Gecko/20031205 Thunderbird/0.4

Alfred M. Szmidt wrote:
No it doesn't render it to that, you still need a net connection to be
able to use a text browser.

Offline browser.

   I'm speaking for people who want to have it handy and nice when
   looking for some information.  That means graphical hypertext to me
   atm., or in other words: HTML + CSS viewed with IE.

It is not our job to care about people that use non-free software.

<sarcastic>
Funny. When I look at the stats of my web pages, I see more than 90% IE. So you mean I should stop publishing via HTML to not support non-free software?
</sarcastic>

It's not our job to care with which tools people consume our provided information, as long as it can be done with free software in a reasonable way. Fortunately we have HTML and CSS standardized, and for gnu.org you have to follow these standards.

And really, what is the point of having a "good looking page", with no
useful information?  The Hurd project lacks a lot of documentation.

Aren't we talking about increasing the level of valuable documentation? I think work should start as near as possible to potential testers that may become users and developers.

I don't want to confuse marketing and information.
'try-again -vv'
The best way to attract users, testers, developers and the like is to establish a good image of the Hurd in public. There's no use of people trying the Hurd and telling their friends that it does not work. We must make clear what you can expect, so it must be made clear what one gets when she tries the Hurd. For people which watch the Hurd very closely it's important to tell them that the often smiled at and reputed to death Hurd is still alive and will come to a usable state.
Both aims together lead to one conclusion:
Good, true information is the best marketing.

   It would be nice to see the access stats and find out what people
   visit the Hurd pages at gnu.org.

How in heavens name would statistics help?  They don't produce code,
documentation, bug reports, help new users, etc.  Statistics are
completly useles.

Are nice to look at.
Give information.
I'd like to know if people use the links. That would mean they want to know more. And I want to know if they come back again and how often they check the news.

   I could happily live with some people trying to run the Hurd just
   because of the good impression they had looking at the pages.

I wouldn't, trying to use something does not help to develop it.  And
having "nice pages" don't help in that regard in anyway what so ever.

So you would send everybody away who is not actively doing something in code? Maybe I should do something to make the pages nicer. You wouldn't do this obviously.

   > Recall also that some people don't use the web at all, or not
   > very frequently.

   I'm not talking about that people.

Irrelevant.  The web pages should serve for everyone, including those
who use speech syntesiers, or those who use the CVS version of Xfree86
and Gnome.

Instructions for cvs already exist. Insert a link to the NEWS file. Would that be sufficient for these?

Patrick
--
Engineers motto:  | Patrick Strasser
[ ] cheap         | <past at sbox dot tugraz dot at>
[ ] good          |
[ ] fast          | Student of Telematik
-> choose any two | Techn. University Graz, Austria




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