Andreas Rossberg a écrit (le 10/07/2016 à 09:21) : > To paraphrase Dijkstra, IMHO email and mailing lists are an > improvement over more “modern” forums in almost every way, once you > get past the “flashiness” thing: > > - participation without having to constantly log into yet another > account (with potential tracking), > - all communication through the same tool/UI (that actually works), > easy cross-communication and cross-quoting, archiving in one place, > etc > - offline reading & writing, > - proper threading (Discourse sees its lack as a “feature"), > - no annoying gamification, > - open, standardised and guaranteed to still be around in 5 or 10 > years from now. i fully agree with all this. however, there is one single feature that i miss with email and newsgroup: the ability to edit a message after it was sent. sadly, by the nature of those protocols this can’t be fixed, and to me this is the single stuff that makes the web‐2.0‐based solutions (forums and the like) unavoidable. [ other missing features, available in more recent technologies, are either superfluous (avatars?), or tied to contents (redaction in a Markdown‐like format, syntax highlighting…), thus can be circumvented. ] moreover, i second Anthony & others in saying that the mailing‐list format somehow refrains people from participating. it may be good for the essential discussions, but otherwise limits beginner questions and general community exchanges. plus the current mailing lists lack visiblity, as pointed out before. for these reasons i believe too that a forum‐like solution may prove valuable. it may allow discussions to grow freely, and as a side‐effect would increase the visibility of the community. to that purpose, Discourse may be the less bad solution, for it — being open‐source, — being well‐known, by which i mean that: (1) it is a modern, trendy solution that would refresh the image of the community as depicted by Duane, and may attract newcomers, [*] (2) the interface would look familiar, — gaining from a wider adoption more potential for becoming a standard in lieu of the wild forum solutions, as a successor for, say, newsgroups. — plus i see on its homepage than it can use OpenID, which partially addresses your point about logging in (not the tracking issue, though…). the drawback is, as you pointed out, the absence of interoperability with external clients and protocols (run a browser+JS or die). however, as it is open‐source, it should be possible to ask for improvement of at least the email gateway — even if a good email gateway still wouldn’t be satisfying from that perspective. also note that Discourse apparently is a mailing‐list manager too, so we may conveniently mirror this list in our new forum; this would help avoiding community fragmentation as you fear it. -- Glen Mével [*]: well, you should ask a more hype-sensitive person on that point.