Hello there. I was recently advised to repost this on the kde-doc-english list. My main objective was to comment on the design of the KDE help system, so I don't mean to be unnecessarily cruel to docs.kde.org in particular in my argument below. I suppose it all comes down to the difference between mere documentation, and a Help System. The focus of the argument in kde-usability was that a different design for the former might help maintainability (but last I checked, they were discussing wikis), where my argument for the latter (Help System) is that either A) KDE doesn't really have much of one (in terms of a context-sensitive and easily approachable help interface) or B) the current implementation (Help Center) might could use a more task-centric redesign. ------------ Docs.kde.org is application-and-library-specific. Not activity-specific. Users like to burn CDs and setup an email account. "kdebase-apps", "kde-pim", and "Search by Application Name" are just hurdles getting in their way. In addition, having up front, on the documentation site, to figure out which library/program/VERSION OF KDE is extremely unintuitive. A user won't care if he's using KDE3 or KDE4 or 4.1 or 4.2. Sending email isn't a KDE-version-specific task. Hence we can easily conclude docs.kde.org is obviously geared towards a different audience -- mainly those who need reference, NOT instruction or tutorials. [Note this is not a criticism of the actual DOCUMENTATION for KDE programs -- several manuals (Kontact, Amarok, etc) are very useful. This post _IS_ a criticism of the entire design of docs.kde.org, and the paradigm of program-centric application access being unsuited for casual users.] Mac Help Center, Windows XP/Vista Help Center, and even the GNOME Help Center demonstrate a much more activity-centric approach ("Burn a CD", "Share your documents", "Paint a picture", "Clean up your PC"), and for this reason (if they actually succeed in attracting users to open the darn help program in the first place) they have a much better chance of actually assisting the casual user. This is the same problem with the KDE Help Center; a lack of "getting things done" focus, replaced with a "super large list and index of every reference material we can cram into the documentation packages." _______________________________________________ kde-doc-english mailing list kde-doc-english@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-doc-english