[Foundation-l] Request for approval for a wiki for standards
Robert Scott Horning
robert_horning at netzero.net
Sat Jan 7 14:38:13 UTC 2006
Chris Jenkinson wrote:
> Gerard Meijssen wrote:
>
>> Hoi,
>>
>> On Meta the request for a Wikistandards wiki has been revived.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> GerardM
>
>
> Are these standards you would put on this new wiki anything to do with
> a manual of style or writing guidelines?
>
> I also have to ask - is a wiki really the best format for documenting
> standards? A standard is supposed to be an immutable document; it
> can't just be edited and changed by anyone because that's going to
> ruin compatibility.
>
> Chris
I believe that a wiki is an excellent method of collaborative writing,
including standards development. Often when trying to develop a
standard you need to work on several parts of the standard
simultaneously, and having revision control and other feedback methods
found on MediaWiki software is going to be very useful.
As far as making a standard immutable, we already have page protection
once the standard has been put in place. This is no different than
Wikisource where similar kinds of immutable documents already exist.
That would have to be a community decision as to if a certain page has
a "final" status and can't be changed any more.
More likely, you would have to have some sort of versioning of documents
anyway, where you would have a "frozen" official version and a draft
version that is still a work in progress. We already have date
versioning in MediaWiki software anyway, so this is something that
doesn't even need extra development.
As far as a style guide, there are several current ISO related
guidelines that could be adapted for use by anybody trying to write
standards documentation of any sort. This isn't even new for Wikimedia
projects either.
I want to add that there is a huge need for open and free (as in speech
as well as beer) standards. Even modestly priced standards from groups
like ANSI or ISO can cost more than $200 a piece, and I've seen some
fairly general standards documents costing more than $100,000 each with
some incredibly draconian non-disclosure agreements. Even supposedly
public standards like the National Electrical Code that governs how
buildings are wired with electricity can cost a couple thousand
dollars... and that is a matter of law that you have to live by.
This is something that really needs to be established, and I feel it
would be an excellent candidate for the seed wiki (under whatever name
that might be officially called if it get going). There isn't quite the
same level of support for this as say Wikiversity, but I think we could
get a strong community going for this.
This really can't be accomodated in Wikibooks directly in part because
this isn't really teaching materials or textbook development, and the
standards development process needs some additional community support
that simply can't be directly accomodated by Wikibooks. New policies
and social structures need to be developed that are specific and unique
to the development of standards documentation. Most of that can be
developed ad hoc once the project is developed.
--
Robert Scott Horning
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