On 1 December 2014 at 10:02, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote: > I meant to reply earlier... > > On Mon, Nov 24, 2014 at 11:37 AM, Alexandre Rafalovitch <[email protected]> > wrote: >> >> They are super-stale > > > Yup but it’s a wiki so feel free to freshen it up. I’ll be doing that in a > bit. It may also be helpful if these particular pages got more > prominence/visibility by being linked from the ref guide and/or the website.
On the TODO list. If you are planning to update the client list, maybe we should coordinate, so we don't step on each other's toes. I am planning to do more than a minor tweak. >> and there is no easy mechanism for people to >> announce their additions. I am not even sure the announcements are >> welcome on the user mailing list. > > > IMO the mailing list is an excellent place to announce new Solr integrations > in the ecosystem out there. People announce various things on the list from > time to time. I haven't even announced solr-start.com on the list, wasn't sure whether it's appropriate. So, maybe it's ok, but I suspect that's not visible. >> It comes down to the funnel/workflow. At the moment, the workflow >> makes it _hard_ to maintain those pages. CMM level 1 kind of hard. > Can you recommend a fix or alternative? I thought that's what my previous emails were about?!? Setup a 'client-maintainer' mailing list seeded with SolrJ people, update the Wiki, make it more prominent. Organize a TodoMVC equivalent for Solr clients (with prizes?). Ensure it is a topic (with mentor) for Google's Summer of Code. Have somebody from core Solr to keep at least one eye on the client communities' mailing lists. I started doing that as an individual, but the traction was not there. It needs at least a couple of people to push in the same direction. Regards, Alex. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
