Thoughts on different points:
- Hosting Plans
- Look at this link to web hosting offered through something as bland as GoDaddy.com. This is fairly standard from what I have seen. This would be an acceptable go-by.
- Towards the bottom of this page, select the “windows” plan.
- “Do you want wiki-type tools that would allow community driven content? Wjo has ownership of the information? Can others fix faulty information?
- I have had some thoughts on this subject:
- The deliverable is two-fold:
- Insight from one person on how they would do something
- Insight from a community on how they would do something
- The individual model should not be editable, but I am still thinking about the community model.
- There are two possibilities for the community model as I see them:
- A wiki page where everyone can edit and the viewer sees one page presenting a complete topic. That topic may have 50 authors, but the viewer doesn’t know that, nor do they particularly care.
- The upside is that this format is probably the easiet to understand, and people already see this type of format on Wikipedia
- The downside is that you may lose something of value from different perspectives not being offered.
- A group blog (or something like that), where you see a history of input from different users.
- The upside is that you can see all the users, band potentially capture the perspective of different people
- The downside is the value of the differing perspectives could be lost in trying to sift through all the segmented pieces of input.
- Conclusion: I think we may want to have a blended model that allows for both formats, allowing the users to pick which format is preferable to them.
- Part of the page just has to do with authored content
- Another part of the page (different tab) has to do with a wiki covering the topic area discussed showing a community based perspective.
- The author links the content to the topic area, which is linked to the wiki.
- People establishing their identity: Possible solution – peer reviewed content
- In the academic community, it is an established model that before an article can be published; it must be reviewed by peers of similar or elevated caliber. The idea is that the community approves learning and evolves as a whole
- This could be beneficial to the question we face. IF we allow those that are creating profiles to label themselves as differing levels of proficiency (amateur/semi-pro/professional/star), to retain that proficiency they would have to post content that is judged by others to be of that quality.
- This sort of rescinds my previous position, that someone could not be “harmed” in position by the community, but at this point I don’t see another way.
- The benefit is that to stay on the community, or rather, to establish identity, the author has to be “voted in” by the community at large
- This still doesn’t entirely solve the problem of starting the community.
- We could hand out proficiency levels initially, and then take those away over time
- The problem with that is that giving away position in the network destroys value.
- The whole concept is that the stature you are in real life can be mimicked online. The only difference is accessibility.
- Another thought entirely – we ditch labels altogether, and people’s value is established by downloads of their material and peer review of their content, completely aside from branding of stature.
- This would solve the start up problem
- It would also keep the community honest
- This would be far simpler to implement.
- I need some input here guys. Each method has its quirks.