Firstly, I just want to disclaim this post with a couple of comments.
1. I'm very grateful to the staff and contributors on this site and think they do a great job.
2. Any criticism that this post might contain is meant as purely constructive and will hopefully drive some debate rather than cause offense or start a flame war.
So, now that's out the way...
Does anyone else here feel like the wiki is not living up to its potential?
Given the size and activity of the community here, I can't help but think that the wiki seems to have fizzled since its introduction. As I'm a strong wiki advocate, I find this pretty sad. I think the potential of a good DIY wiki working along side the forums is huge with accurate information organised, recorded and constantly improved.
I think one of the main reasons that the wiki is not functioning well is a lack of knowledge in the community about what a wiki is and how it should be used. There's not yet a consistent approach to what a wiki article should look like. Some articles are just links to the forum, others show a clear misunderstanding of how content should be organised (e.g. /Gardening - don't like to single anyone out, this is just a typical poor wiki topic).
I think that one of the ways to help tackle this would be to try and organise a small wiki task-force who's job it is to:
1. Organise and transfer swathes of content from the forums into succinct wiki articles.
2. Evangelise and promote the wiki throughout the forums. This would include pointing forum users at wiki articles when the help they need already exists, and also encouraging potential wiki contributors to add their forum wisdom to the wiki when appropriate.
Although the wiki is about collaborative authoring (as such, content is not owned by any individual), in the past I've seen how one or more 'Editors' of this kind (think of a magazine Editor) when the wiki is young can really help to lay the ground work for a successful wiki and educate contributors to become good Editors themselves.
If 3 to 5 people spent a month doing this in their spare time, this might be the shot in the arm the wiki needed to get enthusiasm from the community going.
The next problem which, at the risk of ****ing off the admins here, I think is holding back the the wiki and stifling the content/participation is: the wiki engine is poor. For any new wiki nowadays, there's only one choice of wiki engine, and that is MediaWiki. The tool-set and features of this engine not only make authoring pages easy, they also help to drive the overall structure of the wiki in the right direction (even if those controlling the wiki initially are new to the format).
Migration to a new wiki engine can be a headache, however the benefit can be a living wiki over a dead one. With the amount of content in the diynot wiki (i.e. a small amount), I think it's a no-brainer. I'm not for a moment saying the sticking with a poorer wiki engine means the wiki cannot thrive, but if you give users the best tools available, it really helps.
So, does anyone else have similar opinions? Does anyone think I'm talking a load of cr*p?
PS. To those that have already been doing hard work on the wiki (e.g. there's some great work going in to Electrics) thank you! I'd also love to hear your thoughts on the above
1. I'm very grateful to the staff and contributors on this site and think they do a great job.
2. Any criticism that this post might contain is meant as purely constructive and will hopefully drive some debate rather than cause offense or start a flame war.
So, now that's out the way...
Does anyone else here feel like the wiki is not living up to its potential?
Given the size and activity of the community here, I can't help but think that the wiki seems to have fizzled since its introduction. As I'm a strong wiki advocate, I find this pretty sad. I think the potential of a good DIY wiki working along side the forums is huge with accurate information organised, recorded and constantly improved.
I think one of the main reasons that the wiki is not functioning well is a lack of knowledge in the community about what a wiki is and how it should be used. There's not yet a consistent approach to what a wiki article should look like. Some articles are just links to the forum, others show a clear misunderstanding of how content should be organised (e.g. /Gardening - don't like to single anyone out, this is just a typical poor wiki topic).
I think that one of the ways to help tackle this would be to try and organise a small wiki task-force who's job it is to:
1. Organise and transfer swathes of content from the forums into succinct wiki articles.
2. Evangelise and promote the wiki throughout the forums. This would include pointing forum users at wiki articles when the help they need already exists, and also encouraging potential wiki contributors to add their forum wisdom to the wiki when appropriate.
Although the wiki is about collaborative authoring (as such, content is not owned by any individual), in the past I've seen how one or more 'Editors' of this kind (think of a magazine Editor) when the wiki is young can really help to lay the ground work for a successful wiki and educate contributors to become good Editors themselves.
If 3 to 5 people spent a month doing this in their spare time, this might be the shot in the arm the wiki needed to get enthusiasm from the community going.
The next problem which, at the risk of ****ing off the admins here, I think is holding back the the wiki and stifling the content/participation is: the wiki engine is poor. For any new wiki nowadays, there's only one choice of wiki engine, and that is MediaWiki. The tool-set and features of this engine not only make authoring pages easy, they also help to drive the overall structure of the wiki in the right direction (even if those controlling the wiki initially are new to the format).
Migration to a new wiki engine can be a headache, however the benefit can be a living wiki over a dead one. With the amount of content in the diynot wiki (i.e. a small amount), I think it's a no-brainer. I'm not for a moment saying the sticking with a poorer wiki engine means the wiki cannot thrive, but if you give users the best tools available, it really helps.
So, does anyone else have similar opinions? Does anyone think I'm talking a load of cr*p?
PS. To those that have already been doing hard work on the wiki (e.g. there's some great work going in to Electrics) thank you! I'd also love to hear your thoughts on the above