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Building a Large Linux Knowledgebase

linuxfan writes "It looks like LinuxQuestions.org is aiming to build the largest independent Linux-related knowledgebase using a Wiki. They are using the same software as Wikipedia (MediaWiki), are using a Creative Commons license and look to be off to a good start."

17 of 251 comments (clear)

  1. rats! by theMerovingian · · Score: 3, Insightful


    The one thing keeping me from switching to Linux has a topic, but no one has posted any information there.

    Does linux gaming work, or do you just have to play Neverwinter Nights over and over? (reply some good stuff here, and stick it in the wiki, too).

    --
    "If you think you have things under control, you're not going fast enough." --Mario Andretti
  2. Re:Eh? Largest? Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only problem with the Linux Documentation Project is that it tends to have a lot of outdated information there.

    The Wikipedia should be more up-to-date.

    Then again - I just Google. . . . .

  3. Software Knowledge = Hard by darkmeridian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This sounds like a good idea. However, there are two issues that would hinder something like this:
    1. Variability between Linuxes. There are many distros out there and they all have their own ways of doing the same things.

    2. Variability within Linuxes. Different distros also change their commands between versions. Any knowledge-base specific enough to be of help would have to be extremely thorough. A person working with a 2.4.22-gentoo-r3 kernel, for example, might have a different kernel than someone with the vanilla 2.4.22.

    However, if enough knowledgeable people use the system, then it will hopefully conquer these problems and be useful. But for now, see the gentoo forums for what open source documentation done by a community is capable of. (However, this is only within one distro that is relatively new so it has an easier time of things.)

    2.

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    1. Re:Software Knowledge = Hard by dbIII · · Score: 4, Insightful
      1. Variability between Linuxes. There are many distros out there and they all have their own ways of doing the same things.
      It's not as different as you might think, so long as you don't try to apply visual memory of where menu items go on a button (ie. the MS Windows approach). The first time I used Redhat after using only slackware I found that only a few config files were in different spots, same with debian. My linux knowlege meant that I could do things the first time I sat down at an Irix, Solaris and AIX system. The difference between widely seperated varieties of *nix are far less than the differences between Win98 and any type of WinNT in terms of the commands you use. So long as the answers aren't to click on the third widget on the left, the knowlege can be applied across the board - after all, you can use RPMs on debian and do apt-get on redhat.
      Different distros also change their commands between versions.
      Often the answer is to run the old command, or download it again. Linux does not suffer from "DLL hell", while the default behaviour of rpm is to replace old libraries, if you really need them you can keep them. I have a jigsaw game on my machine that was last compiled in '96, so long as it can still find the original libraries it runs, and everything else just uses the newer version of those libraries - that's why they have names like somelibrary.6.2.so
    2. Re:Software Knowledge = Hard by ciroknight · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Truthfully, I've never used Gentoo (I don't desire to compile every piece of software by hand), but I've found that most of the time their forums are actually quite helpful. Why? Because someone down the line of creating Gentoo thought they should drop their elitest "I r t3h m4st0r h4xx0r" attitude and actually help people. This has been one of the reasons Linux has such a poor adoption rate, even though it's on the shelves right next to Windows in most cases.

      There are plenty of more reasons behind Linux's adoption rate, but think about it this way; if Microsoft and all of it's software was found to be illegal and everyone had to switch over tomorrow, how many governments, how many libraries, how many volumes of people would never touch a computer again because learning new software was too hard, due to people who knew how to use it feeling superior? GNU is all about sharing the knowledge, it's really time that we linux users take to the meaning of the GPL, and not just use it as a license to throw in people's faces.

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
  4. 19 Articles!!! by Timesprout · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Without wishing to sound too sarcastic, you are going to need a tad more than 19 articles to convince me you have a valid knowledge repository. I'll stick with the Linux Documentation Project for the moment thanks

    --
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  5. Wikis everywhere by koody · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It seems like wiki's would be the future of content creation on the web. It's becomeing increasingly popular, just look at the growth rate of wikipedia. Now volunteers are documenting tips and instructions for mozilla in a knowledgebase.

    Wiki's seem to bring together the reasons why the web is seen as useful (disregarding the free pr0n). Easy content creation, accessibility and ease of use. With wiki's you get the added benefit of a central repository to look for the information you need.

    As wiki's grow and become known the need for search engines might lessen. The first resort for information will change from google to the relevan wiki. Google will be seen as second in importance. After all, wiki has the structure of yahoo with the benefits of quality content.

  6. Re:They have that.... by ciroknight · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know this a stab at being funny, but...

    The truth is pretty simple. Google's not enough. Sometimes for the most obscure questions, either most people consider you a nub and tell you to RFTM (which, in many cases, no manual exists), or they don't know themselves how to solve the problem. So, we often spend hours and hours going through google to find out how to get X hardware to work on Y configuration to find that Alan Cox had brilliantly broken my soundcard in 2.4.20... These are the kinds of things that there really should be a one-stop place to find what you need..

    Surprisingly, it's taken this long for anyone to realize this...

    --
    "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
  7. Re:They have that.... by timeOday · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The other big problem is that information goes rapidly out of date.

    Say you need to make a file over 2GB (very common in video processing) and you stumble across this page. You come away thinking linux doesn't support large files, when really it does. In this case you can scroll all the way to the bottom and the author is nice enough to have timestamped the page - 1998. But still, how do you know whether the old information is outdated? Even if you choose some arbitrary cutoff date ("information after Jan 1, 2003 is likely to be fresh") how do you tell google to only find information after that date? You can't.

    Unfortunately there's no easy solution to the problem of outdated information. Useful documentation takes attention and manpower. But perhaps an easily modifiable Wikki-format will encourage more updates and more participation than comparable efforts such as The Linux Documentation Project, which is really just a smattering of FAQs, HOWTO-s, guides, and man pages with no real coherence - full of duplication and stale information.

  8. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This sort of theme is becoming increasingly prevalent these days. Take a look at ESR's recent article on trying to get CUPS to work. The bottom line is, rather than wasting energy writing more HOWTO's to get some impossibly-difficult-to-install software working, how about spending the time making the software easier to install?? Hmmmm? Or is Linux doomed to be used only by elitists?

    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by DA-MAN · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or is Linux doomed to be used only by elitists?

      Linux is an OS by geeks, for geeks. 1 size does not fit all. As Linux gets easier and easier to use, it will take n more users of all types, but dont for one second think that it will stop being by geeks or for geeks first.

      Which is not to say that software shouldn't be easier to install, just saying that it isn't about elitism.

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  9. Re:Question by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Microsoft has a knowledgebase as well, but only for troubleshooting, service packs, and development. I've been to their site maybe twice.

    I tend to avoid it, it's got lots of reference stuff but is pretty short on examples, which probably explains all the good user supported sites/knowledgebases around the web.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  10. Re:Question by Welsh+Dwarf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does it strike anyone as a bit of a negative attribute that you have to have a massive knowledgebase to use your operating system?

    The answer is that you don't, the wiki is more aimed at people who just want to find something out about Linux (ie 'How do they read e-mail without Outlook?'), are looking for a good distribution to try, or are curious and want to learn more about it (hence the technical parts)

    However, I've always had to rely on poorly-written HOWTOs and other documents to spend three hours just getting a sound card or USB mouse to work under X.

    Sounds like your distro isn't that recent (or that you're useing Slack or Debian, in which case the Howtos are to be expected). Modern Distros generally take care of your mouse and sound card in a few seconds while you watch the progress bar

    Not to diss you, but Linux just isn't that hard anymore.

    --
    Ask 8 slackers a question, get 10 awnsers (a citation, but I can't remember from who)
  11. Re:Question by Ganennon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Since "everyone" is using Windows, it's easy to get help in real life. Also, Swedish highschools force their students to learn the basics of Windows in an obligatory course. It's really supposed to be a general course about computers, but in reality it's all about Windows. Once a not-so-advanced Windows user wants to do something "odd", the lack of a well-known Windows tutorial is apparent. For example, very many (newbie mudders) do not know how to turn on the echo function in Windows telnet. There's lots of tutorials online on how to do this, but few seem to know where to look.

  12. Re:This is great untill by jjohnson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wikipedia gets enough traffic, and has enough regular users, that all changes are reviewed by at least a couple people, in practice; that's all that's needed to keep vandalism manageable, it appears. On a few obscure pages I've authored, mass deletions and nasty comments were removed within hours; the higher traffic pages are even more monitored, to the extent that 'editing wars' break out over them, requiring editors to lock pages for a period of time to let tempers cool.

    So what the linux questions wiki needs for reliability is a critical mass of users; the rest takes care of itself.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  13. Um, OpenFacts? by Mike+Hicks · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hmm. The Germany government has been supporting OpenFacts for some time. I guess I've tried to get people interested in that site, but it hasn't gotten very far (in the English version, at least -- the Germans seem to be doing well in the Deutsch version)

    The good news for the new project is that all OpenFacts material is public domain, so it's fair to cut-n-paste off that site (well, if there's anything very useful).

    Um, and how is this site run by LinuxQuestions independent, exactly? I guess I don't quite understand how that can be the case. Whatever, I guess.

  14. Re:Question by t0ny · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Microsoft has a knowledgebase as well, but only for troubleshooting, service packs, and development. I've been to their site maybe twice.

    Ignorance is bliss, maybe? Because you can find out just about anything Microsoft related via Technet. This includes troubleshooting, white papers, documents on best practices, general network design, security, etc.

    If you actaully work with MS products, and dont use technet, you are definitely not working smart.

    It would be NICE to say you dont need a large database, but it would be pretty ignorant to think that anything could be that way. Auto mechanics, lawyers, doctors, EVERYONE who works on complex matters is going to need a well organized resource to help them out. There is far too many details for someone to think they will know it all.

    The only people who seem like they never encounter problems are those who are just good at troubleshooting and using their reference sources.

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