- From: Chris Mills <cmills@opera.com>
- Date: Mon, 15 Oct 2012 08:59:59 +0100
- To: jonathan@garbee.me
- Cc: <public-webplatform@w3.org>
+1, I also think this would be a really good idea. It would also be a big timesaver for people trying to explain to others where to put their documentation ;-) Chris Mills Open standards evangelist and dev.opera.com editor, Opera Software Co-chair, web education community group, W3C Author of "Practical CSS3: Develop and Design" (http://my.opera.com/chrismills/blog/2012/07/12/practical-css3-my-book-is-finally-published) * Try Opera: http://www.opera.com * Learn about the latest open standards technologies and techniques: http://dev.opera.com * Contribute to web education: http://www.w3.org/community/webed/ On 15 Oct 2012, at 01:49, jonathan@garbee.me wrote: > I have seen it come up a handful of times in the chatroom where people are trying to decide where best to place content. Whether it be them wanting to add a new article or section of content or move an existing article to a proper place. I think there are two things that can help this quite a bit: > > 1) We should try and get a sitemap of just the content (not special pages) and make it easily accessible. This way we can get a good overall view of the sites layout and decide best where things should go from a hierarchical point of view. > > 2) I am thinking of a new documentation page that will give the general steps for analyzing the content to be added to decide where best to put it. > > These two additions would help us better organize content all around. > > > Any thoughts? > >
Received on Monday, 15 October 2012 08:00:29 UTC