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Overhaul and complete update of awesome page #4
Overhaul and complete update of awesome page #4
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Thanks for starting to organize all of this! I appreciate the effort to label these but I really don't understand the labeling system or how it was applied. For example, why is discovery-channel an "external module" when discovery-swarm is a "core module" (discovery-swarm depends n discovery-channel and they were both written by max/mathias). Or why is dat-colors a community project. In my mind there are a few categories that are clear:
My biggest confusion is the mix of modules we use to build hyper[core|drive] and modules built on top of hyper[core|drive], for example in the streams section. It'd be cool if that was made clearer with the icons, but right now the icons seem to confuse me more in that section. And a few general comments/questions:
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I gave the labeling my best effort as a newcomer to the dat community. I spend lots of time to determine what is what. Every newcomer will have the same confusion. As you rightly state you and the rest of the dat team are the one which know best which icon belongs where, and what is outdated! That's the issue: its now in your heads only and we have to bother you with needless questions on #dat :) It would be great if you incorporated this PR (because the old awesome was really outdated) and work from there. |
PS Pump could be removed, but others are so essential that they add information to people that e.g. want to create ports of dat technology to different languages / runtimes and are working from the specs / protocols. |
I think currently there are a number of better solutions to aggregating the docs, and also allow some richer formats in docs.datproject.org (like 'warning' yellow box formatting, etc.) PS was an ugly icon anyway, and unclear what it meant. |
PS2 I got some really really positive feedback on the layout of this list on the #dat channel. |
Exactly, but are they still active part of the ecosystem or should they have a clear 'Outdated' warning (or go to (this all makes it really hard to discover the dat ecosystem, and I then I am only talking about the dat project side of things, not even the wider community) |
On the current labeling system:
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Ya, I'd agree, here is what is blocking the merge:
This is my fundamental concern with the labels. If every newcomer will be similarly confused, how are they supposed to contribute back to this list? And then if the Dat team members also do not understand it, we cannot maintain it. I really appreciate the intention of the labels but this system causes confusion without communicating more information. |
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@joehand I have created a documentation proposal: dat-ecosystem-archive/datproject-discussions#73 |
@joehand The latest commits solve most issues you addressed
Not addressed: Outdated modules
Option 3 is not so bad, IMHO:
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@joehand the PR on Docs fixes the documentation aggregation, after which this PR can be merged. See dat-ecosystem-archive/docs#79 |
@aschrijver question, is there a reason for using the |
Its to create a list with the icons. Otherwise it looks visually quite bad. I put a lot of effort in making the list look as clean as possible. |
a good rule of thumb for github PRs is to not spend lots of time on something that the maintainers haven't agreed to. this makes it harder to maintain, as it has made the markdown more complicated. i also don't find the icons to be useful, the distinction between community and dat team modules is arbitrary IMO. otherwise i appreciate the effort to organize this list. it's just hard to make big unsolicited opinionated changes and expect everyone to be on the same page. |
Yea, thanks. It is extremely hard to know what is a Dat Project project and what is not. I find that all the time. The same goes who is exactly part of the core team. I started completing these changes after getting very positive reaction on #dat after my first draft. Should maybe not have done that. I've also given a lot of unsolicited opinionated feedback on Discussions, which is largely an exercise for myself, it appears. It not easy volunteering one's valuable time trying to improve dat project in ways that are not hardcore-coding related. |
…create outdated section
Thanks for updating the list @aschrijver. I did some reorganization. I tried to separate out modules that a user may need for building stuff on top of dat vs what we used to build dat. I also moved the outdated modules to their own section as you suggested (since we do not own many of them, adding outdated to all of their readme files isn't feasible).
We understand it's difficult to tell what is part of Dat and what isn't, that is why we feel making that distinction is not necessary (I've not seen any other awesome list with that distinction). It was also not something I'm willing to maintain as it'd require more curation of every PR.
Thanks for putting all the effort in to updating this list, it was something we'd put off since the last big release in May. We recognize that non-coding contributions are hard at this point, and I am sorry for that. I'd wish we could work to improve that immediately. But with a current team of four (some part time) trying to ship new features, fix bugs, and find additional funding is about all we can manage. It is something we'd like to prioritize but unfortunately not feasible right now so you'll have to continue to be self-guided. |
Thanks a lot @joehand You did a lot of work on it still. It was the reshuffling that a non-insider could never do. Really appreciate it!
It is okay without the icons, but you understand my need for them. For a technology to be trusted people should be able to find the work of the core team, be it core modules, reference impls, etc.
No need to be sorry, you, @mafintosh @maxogden @Karissa @juliangruber are all doing your utmost. Look, when I started investigating Dat Project I became very worried on a number of weaknesses and threats I perceive, that may lead you to fail. The biggest threat currently, IMHO, is you are already swamped in technical work and may suffer to some extent from 'developer myopia' (as I described in my small culture SWOT). I've seen this clearly already with sciencefair and hashbase where I gave feedback on nonsensical, technical texts on their landing pages; not targeted to audience. In this way Dat Project risks becoming 'just' a set of cool projects and apps, but not a good, established technology. I would strongly advise you to have at least one team member dedicate half his/her time on the non-technical stuff, or acquire some more funding for and additional part-time member! Besides, having clarity of vision, clear strategy, community approach and concrete action plans should make it much easier to acquire funding, I would argue. |
Yes, we'd agree =). Let us know if you know foundations interested in funding us. You can also donate: https://donate.datproject.org. We can make sure your donation goes towards that position. |
This PR is related to:
and (to lesser extent):