Anyone can set up their very own Discourse in 30 minutes or less. But how do you get people to go there? I often describe Discourse as a great, interesting dinner party. Or, depending on the community, just a party.
I am using Discourse to move an existing community from a mailing list to a collaboration space that is just a bit more structured, but still free-flow.
Hi @blau Yesterday a pilot discourse.wmflabs.org has started as an alternative to the wikimedia-l mailinglist. How far have you come with moving an existing community? What have you learned, what can you share?
Thanks for your answer. I do recognize the postive points. Regarding surveys, I’ve come across something like polss in D, is that what you meant? I haven’t tried polls yet. You mention “@ group broadcast”. I don’t know what that is in D.
I mean polls, yes. They work, but in the past if I changed the poll itself or the info below it it broke the poll. Don’t know if it has improved, since I don’t use it often.
Second, I mean the ability to tag a whole grout wit the syntax
@groupname (similar to @username)
You can fine tune it creating a group of users, and in the group options decide who can tag the whole group.
I’m looking to create a forum for handling data. I’m curious to understand what metrics you monitor as you build your forum. My guess is items such as new members, active members (how do you decide this?), and # of content items posted.
Yes, this data is all featured directly on the Discourse dashboard at /admin in the form of pretty graphs, which we’ve revamped significantly since this was originally posted.