This email is to drive some discussion around $subject. It follows from a blog soon to be posted on the Fedora Community blog (https://communityblog.fedoraproject.org). The text below is copied from that blog: Should we stop publishing the current guides now? The requirement to keep publishing the current guides feels very self-imposed. Continuing to publish them is a challenge for the new tooling as it has to be built to accommodate the past and therefore slows down the future. Additionally, publishing the current books spreads our resources very thinly, if not past the breaking point. It also creates inertia which prevents the move to topics. Confusion can result from this as well because contributors don't know what to update (old books or new topics). Lastly, there is a growing belief in the larger documentation community that no docs is better than old docs. Here this is a direct reference to the fact that we don't republish all the docs for every release and we don't thoroughly review every doc that is published. Versioned docs are important, but some old materials is probably going to cause problems (i.e. references to yum or iptables.) One proposal was to have a "flag day" where we stop updating the current docs and another day (or same day) where we stop the publication. this would definitely need to be moderated for versions not end of lifed. Please reply here for discussion. regards, bex -- docs mailing list docs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/admin/lists/docs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx