Again, the same golden principle, the more user your have, the better the product. If I were you, I might try really hard to get my initial users... Once you have 1000 websites using askbot, you don't need to worry about other stuff...
Then, I might work on making the installation easier. For early adopters, more function doesn't help. Easy of use will make it stand out.
I have a great idea:
If you can make a google app in the google app gallery: http://appgallery.appspot.com/. Then people will only need to click several times to do the migration... But it is free and has python and Django ...
Man. I am really excited about this idea now...
Correction: unlike iphone apps, it is not that straightforward to deploy a google apps at google engine :( ...
Hey, thanks for the advice!
I agree that offering this application on App Engine would be super cool in many ways and I bet that somebody will do it sooner or later with a similar project.
Speaking for myself personally - I want to focus right now on making the UI better. Would you like to jump on our boat and start a GAE branch?
The guiding principle here should be that DB backend must be easily switchable without rewrites of view functions and anything else (except the DB accessors) so that we could merge the branches easily. That may require rewriting the views and the DB API once to accommodate later changes, but I don't know anything about GAE yet (could somebody else fill in?)
In my opinion, the current UI is good enough for now.
Let us put it this way: - a user, not a website admin, will like a website because of the ui - a website admin, given two product, one is bug-less with regular ui design, the other is full of bugs with fancy ui design, he will pick the bug-less one with regular ui design. A lot of website admins do very hard core modification to change the ui anyway, no matter how fancy the default ui is...
I thought right now, the main focus of askbot.org is to convince website admins to use the product, not end users ....
User experience doesn't equal to UI. I thought you want to improve the user experience as a whole, not the UI alone. Given limited resources, the priority is your take ...Personally, in my project, I spent way too much time on the UI part of the project and I really regretted it... It is so hard to go from a 80% perfect UI to a 90% perfect UI ...
Asked: Apr 05 '10
Seen: 699 times
Last updated: Apr 06 '10
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