[Tor www-team] Website proposal

thomas lörtsch tl at rat.io
Mon Sep 28 22:12:23 UTC 2015


Hi Cristóbal,

1) Atom is also available for Mac and Windows - maybe you can drop the note about Linux. But can you add a link to the markdown plugin that you refer to?

2) Content editors are usually keen to put stuff they wrote online immediatly and not have to wait for an admin to hit the publish button. Would that be possible? Like: "give editor A the permission to edit and publish stuff in category B or specifically on page C”?

3) Although I haven’t done any research on that topic lately I suppose there are CMS that allow to publish static sites, provide interfaces for finegrained access control, configurable wysiwyg editors etc. What’s the benefit of using Jekyll and Git? Robustness? Less administration and strain on the server (no DB)? Familiarity of tools?
My apologies if this has already been discussed!

Ciao
Thomas


On 28 Sep 2015, at 20:04, Cristobal <clv at riseup.net> wrote:

> On 28/09/15 14:01, Lunar wrote:
>> Could you elaborate why we could not start with a single Git repository
>> and have dedicated people to review patches and pull requests?
> 
> We could start with a single repository and reviewing patches as well!
> That would indeed simplify things for the 'dedicated people'. In that
> case, the difference from what I proposed would be the way of managing
> commits and pulls, but what I think it's important to point out from my
> proposal is to have an 'easy way' (in my opinion, of course) to writers
> to just write, and front-end developers to just design and code in HTML
> (what I called 'layers': platform, content, presentation).
> 
> The git submodules I suggested in the proposal is more of a 'visual'
> separation to make clear that, for example, tor-website-articles is just
> about content, and so on.
> 
>> Thanks for your input and examples! My current feelings though is that
>> we don't have a clear picture of where we are heading for the website,
>> and how we are going to go there, and who wants to contribute on the
>> content and the layout. So my guts tell me that this is too complicated.
> 
> A good thing to discuss would be... What would encourage (or discourage)
> people to contribute with content? I saw a comment on #6851 that made me
> think about that. I quote:
> 
> "I am not willing to maintain website translations as long as the
> website is wml. How about we pick the content that we feel is useful and
> important and somehow work that into the short user manual (or something
> similar)?"
> 
> One possible answer for that question would be to let people to just
> write content and not worry about design or platform issues
> (the same applies for designers and layouts, I think). So, **maybe**,
> keepings things separated could encourage more people to collaborate
> with the website.
> 
>> Thanks for your input and examples!
> 
> Happy to share my point of view, and willing to collaborate ;)
> 
> -
> Best,
> Cristóbal
> 
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+
thomas lörtsch + hospitalstr. 95 + d 22767 hamburg
+49 173 202 71 99 + tl at rat.io + tomlurge at someOtherServices



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