On Mon, Feb 3, 2020 at 7:43 PM James Perkins <jperkins@redhat.com> wrote:


On Mon, Feb 3, 2020 at 1:06 PM Tomaž Cerar <tomaz.cerar@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey Jaikiran,

I agree in whole what you said.
Stackoverflow is not replacement for forums as they are now.
There is set of discussions / questions that fit perfectly to the SO paradigm but definitely not all of them.

It does seem we need to create a Google group. Seems to be the best place as you can post directly or via email.

+1
 

So maybe having both, SO questions and google group mailing list? That could work.
As for wiki pages, why now utilize github wiki pages?

That is the plan for the wiki's if we need them.
 

Whatever end decision is, keep in mind that it doesn't really matter what stack / software / platform that is chosen,
it is important that it is active. 
As having almost no participation from dev team and veteran community users will surely kill it no mater where it is.

--
tomaz

On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 5:16 AM Jaikiran Pai <jai.forums2013@gmail.com> wrote:

Hello James,

On 01/02/20 1:56 am, James Perkins wrote:
Hello All,
We are in a position where we need to change the community space for WildFly, currently located at https://developer.jboss.org/en/wildfly/. On 2020-03-1 this community space will become read-only.

We've got 3 areas we need to move.
  1. Forums/Q&A
  2. Wiki/FAQ
  3. Articles

1. Forums/Q&A
My preference here is we would use Stack Overflow, specifically the wildfly tag. It seems the forums is really more Q&A than anything.

If we want to keep the forum and Q&A separate we could use Stack Overflow for the Q&A and Google Groups for the forum. Though I don't really see much difference between the forum and Q&A.

The JBoss AS (and now) WildFly forums have over the years seen a steady decline in the number of posts and the quality of posts. Unfortunately, even release announcements which used to happen in the forums previously are no longer made there. Participation in terms of answers or helping out with issues has reduced too (as compared to like maybe a decade ago). The new forum software (Jive), IMO has contributed a lot towards this - its editor was and still is a major hassle, plus the rules around posting (from what I remember new users weren't allowed to post more than a few posts within a few minutes of each other and had to wait hours to post next). Plus, repeated complaints from regular users about this, never ended up seeing any results. Regular contributors who used to answer or help out on issues are no longer around.

Having said that, from what I see, WildFly forum as compared to other forums still sees good amount of traffic in terms of questions. I think JBoss AS and WildFly forums are probably the most active ones right (they used to compete with RichFaces and to some extent HornetQ forum in terms of traffic, but ever since they were sunset, the application server forums are the more frequented ones).

I don't have any concerns on moving away from the current location of these forums. However, I personally don't like them being moved to StackOverflow. I have tried to be a user at StackOverflow a few times, during the past decade. But every time, I have disliked it. If you look at the JBoss AS/WildFly forums, you will notice that a lot of these discussions/questions span multiple posts where the original poster and the volunteer helpers go back and forth asking details and trying to narrow down what the issue is - more like a debug session spread across multiple posts. This kind of interactive discussion hasn't ever been encouraged at StackOverflow and neither does the software nor the people involved seem to encourage it there. That has always made me stay away from StackOverflow.

Google groups on the other hand I think are a better place. I don't use its web interface, but given that it integrates right into your email client, I have found it gives the same level of interactive nature that you typically want in discussions. Quarkus project has been using google groups for its user + dev discussions and so far I have really liked it. So I think maybe hosting the forums as a google group mailing list might be a good idea. In fact, I have a feeling that it might bring in more participation, both from the users as well as volunteers contributors (but that's just a guess).

By the way, I don't fully understand the difference between Q&A and forums. To me they sound the same and unless I'm missing something. Asking users to post in 2 different places (one for Q&A and one for forums) might not be a good idea.



2. Wiki/FAQ
For this we could use GitHub Wiki here. For details see https://help.github.com/en/github/building-a-strong-community/about-wikis.

I don't think anyone uses Wiki/FAQ anymore these days (I miss the days where I used to wait for wikis from Scott Stark. The classloading one is still one of my favourite ones). Neither have I seen too many new wikis/FAQ being created nor have I seen them being referred to in the forums (unlike the good old Adrian days ;)). So I don't have much of an opinion on whether or not to have a new place for them.


3. Articles
I don't know how often articles get created, but it doesn't look like often. My suggestion would be that we just use wildfly.org for this. These seem to be akin to blog posts. 

Articles these days have mainly been from the WildFly dev team before/after a release about new features (which is a good thing). Again I haven't liked the software that hosts these articles (again the editor and other hassles around it), but at least there have been some new articles every now and then. I think wilfly.org for articles sounds fine. Maybe it should optionally have the ability to aggregate any good community users' articles every now and then.

Having said all this, I think it's best to post this announcement and ask for suggestions in the WildFly forums itself, since those are the users we should be looking inputs from.

-Jaikiran

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James R. Perkins
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