- From: Clay Wells <cwells73@gmail.com>
- Date: Tue, 25 Jun 2013 13:28:07 -0400
- To: Eliot Graff <Eliot.Graff@microsoft.com>
- Cc: Chris Mills <cmills@w3.org>, Doug Schepers <schepers@w3.org>, WebPlatform Community <public-webplatform@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAK8UG9ZSVcRVMKmX+ED7G6pgJyKQjcVRmZZEiDDoL6dezcBoZA@mail.gmail.com>
IMHO, the following are pretty much the same thing: Unconfirmed import (Specifically for content donated but yet to be reviewed) **** Needs review (for changes/additions to be buddy-checked) I'm a little confused what the difference would be.? Cheers, Clay On Tue, Jun 25, 2013 at 1:23 PM, Eliot Graff <Eliot.Graff@microsoft.com>wrote: > I like the ideas here, and I would argue for the following set of flags:* > *** > > ** ** > > Unconfirmed import (Specifically for content donated but yet to be > reviewed)**** > > Needs review (for changes/additions to be buddy-checked)**** > > Missing Content (rather than missing examples, with notes to indicate what > content is missing)**** > > Deletion/Move candidate (with notes to indicate details)**** > > Contains Errors (with notes to details)**** > > ** ** > > I think these cover the central concerns in a way that is abstracted > enough to contain most needs. We can use the editorial notes and develop a > syntax that is readable and intuitive:**** > > ** ** > > MISSING CONTENT (3 August 2013): no description of x parameter.**** > > ** ** > > Thanks.**** > > ** ** > > Eliot**** > > ** ** > > *From:* Clay Wells [mailto:cwells73@gmail.com] > *Sent:* Tuesday, June 25, 2013 9:07 AM > *To:* Chris Mills > *Cc:* Doug Schepers; WebPlatform Community > *Subject:* Re: Revamping Flags**** > > ** ** > > In response to both... +1**** > > ** ** > > Cheers,**** > > Clay**** > > ** ** > > On Tue, Jun 25, 2013 at 6:11 AM, Chris Mills <cmills@w3.org> wrote:**** > > Yeah, couldn't agree more. > > I reckon 4 or 5 is about the most we should have, keep things simple and > unimposing. > > Maybe a 4th flag along the lines of "Needs corrections/details adding", if > inaccuracies or missing details have been found, either during the review, > or just by a casual observer. Some details could then be left in the > editorial notes block. > > Chris Mills > Opera Software, dev.opera.com > W3C Fellow, web education and webplatform.org > Author of "Practical CSS3: Develop and Design" (http://goo.gl/AKf9M)**** > > > On 25 Jun 2013, at 10:13, Doug Schepers <schepers@w3.org> wrote: > > > Hi, folks- > > > > We've had many people report that they are discouraged, intimidated, and > confused by the current set of flags. > > > > Julee and I discussed this when I was giving her the rundown of the > recent Seattle Doc Sprint, and we think perhaps we should remove most of > the flags. > > > > We propose the following 3 flags (for now): > > 1) Unconfirmed Imported Content: for MSDN or other automated content > > > > 2) Needs Review: general purpose, for people who want to review of the > content they've changed, or people who want to flag something as odd > > > > 3) Needs Examples: For pages where the examples aren't up to snuff, or > no examples exist. (In writing this email, it occurs to me that we could > also add flags for each of the WPW tasks, but I haven't thought deeply > about it.) > > > > I propose that we discuss the flags on this thread for the next week, > then next week, we change the templates to remove most of the flags. > > > > Changes to the visible style will be done later. > > > > Regards- > > -Doug > > > > **** > > ** ** >
Received on Tuesday, 25 June 2013 17:28:41 UTC