I agree that it would be good to have more useful and interesting content. I don't think it's good to do this by forcing the task on new reviewers. Not everyone enjoys a writing exercise and it shouldn't be required to become a reviewer. However, I encourage people to post about cool WebKitty stuff! - Maciej On Aug 2, 2010, at 11:56 AM, Tony Gentilcore wrote:
The Surfin' Safari blog seems to have fairly wide readership in the web dev community. Google Reader reports 35k Reader subscribers. For comparison: blog.chromium.org has 17k and blog.mozilla.com has 10k. However, the last post with descriptive content was back on April 18th. Since that post, we've written 8 "X is a now a WebKit reviewer" posts. One recent commenter said:
"I don’t suppose there’s anything more interesting going on in WebKit land worth blogging about, is there? So-and-so is a new WebKit reviewer isn’t nearly as interesting as whatever new hotness is coming down the pipe. And I know I’m not the only one who thinks so… Feel like blogging about WebKit awesomeness?"
I propose we increase the amount of blogging about WebKit awesomeness by changing the tradition for new reviewer posts.
Instead of defaulting to:
So-and-so is now a WebKit reviewer Posted by Someone-else So-and-so has worked on awesome-feature or awesome-infrastructure...
We encourage (or just allow?) a format more like:
How awesome-infrastructure works Posted by So-and-so, the latest WebKit reviewer Here's my description of how awesome-infrastructure works in WebKit...
-OR-
Awesome-feature is the new hotness Posted by So-and-so, the latest WebKit reviewer Web developers can now use awesome-feature. Here's how it works...
Thoughts?
-Tony _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list webkit-dev@lists.webkit.org http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev