Les Mikesell wrote: > Ed Greshko wrote: > >>>> 1) be ABLE to write good documentation. You yourself acknowledged >>> good "documenters" are scarce. You're either good at it or you >>> aren't, it's just like programming or any other complex creative >>> activity. This is the biggest obstacle, or at least the first thing >>> that makes the "write it yourself or shut up" useless (at least). >> Actually, my motives where much more subtle (sinister). >> I tend to feel that some those wanting more/better documentation don't >> quite realize how difficult producing quality documentation for the >> masses truly is. So, it is more of "try doing it and maybe you'll gain >> some appreciation for the difficulty". > > How does understanding the difficultly help? And other than the > interactive desktop programs like the office tools, why should > 'masses' need to know all the details? > >>> 2) have enough free time, after you've paid mortgage, food and bills, >>> to start and finish writing a manual. Unless you're _paid_ just to >>> write that documentation, of course. Even if you're good, it takes >>> a lot of time and effort to do a good job. >>> >>> >> Which is why there may be a niche market for some company involved >> "support" to include documentation. But, that would require a business >> plan and a business model.... :-( > > There is a well known book publisher covering technical topics with a > bazillion titles, but published books can't keep up with the rate of > change in fedora. What we need is a way to eliminate most of the need > for local configuration in the same way open source eliminates most of > the need for local programming for common tasks. That is, have a way > that a configuration that someone has expertly tuned for a particular > purpose can be shared with anyone who needs to do the same kind of > work. Fedora mostly just ships one config file for every program and > might do a little tweaking to match hardware and user choices during > installation. If there were perhaps a hundred choices instead, > pre-tuned to different usage models, the end user would only need to > know what he wanted to accomplish, not the million variables he had to > change to do it. > *** I'm not talking about FEDORA...the article wasn't about FEDORA *** And this is getting even more OT than before. -- Use a pun, go to jail. Mei-Mei.Greshko@xxxxxxxxxxx
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