-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 Hi
On Saturday 14 June 2014 at 9:33:07 PM, in <mid:539cb183.10...@openmailbox.org>, Kristy Chambers wrote: > I think providing an official, complete, > easily-understandable, up-to-date, reviewed and > qualitative documentation by experts for beginners and > experts is absolutely necessary for security-software. > Therefore GnuPG is in need of that. I'm not sure about "official" in this context, but agree the rest is at least desirable. > I'm not > saying that old manuals are implying bad manuals (some > options haven't changed for long, therefore no change > in docs in need). Indeed. When I was doing my physics A-level (a long time ago now), for certain subject areas we used elderly textbooks that covered the material much better than the more modern references. In one particular case, the books were over 40 years old. The style of writing was very dated and the units described had been superceded several times, but it was still a very useful reference. > After all, I don't have the feeling, that the docs > (where some of them are really good) linked on the > GnuPG-page are providing, what I mentioned in the first > sentences of my message. A single, joined-up documentation providing what you mentioned would be a valuable resource, if people with the appropriate expertise and profile could be induced to produce it and to revise/update it from time to time. And the plethora of existing and third-party documentation would still be available for broader reference. > Although some people would probably deny, that it's not > the job gnupg.org to provide a good tutorial about > using gpg for e-mail-security with some other > gpg-related software like Enigmail+Thunderbird, I would say providing a good tutorial on email security could easily be seen to fall within the documentation set you seek. But I would also say it should be a broad-brush approach, because detailed specifics about a range of related applications should fall outwith the scope of a documentation project such as you suggest. That said, there might be merit in including one or two case studies that did go into such specifics. > Who if not > GnuPG-experts should write good, easily-understandable > tutorials about the practical use of gpg by beginners > for e-mail-encryption? For the documentation to be useful to beginners, it is important to also have input from people who recently were beginners. Experts in any field tend not to have a reasonably fresh memory of the difficulties and doubts they had as beginners. - -- Best regards MFPA mailto:2014-667rhzu3dc-lists-gro...@riseup.net Can you imagine a world with no hypothetical situations? -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iPQEAQEKAF4FAlOeAz1XFIAAAAAALgAgaXNzdWVyLWZwckBub3RhdGlvbnMub3Bl bnBncC5maWZ0aGhvcnNlbWFuLm5ldEJBMjM5QjQ2ODFGMUVGOTUxOEU2QkQ0NjQ0 N0VDQTAzAAoJEKipC46tDG5paSAD/j4FkoL/R+v1v+XqjYliNwBL7UyY0CC0lzek GjI6d5NuRsd6xMx404LW6RZv2V4Ydrsxmb4yeg0vHzqPNJZsWPoSdFWGHql57Z29 DSEqQyWtVs46qGGrRsH8VkRBks6mgL6Q697uT+liIzG911gXBzfBokXTgn/MGF6Q 3U3VpZ0b =6xDS -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users