On Jan 22, 2008, at 5:57 PM, justanotheradress(a)gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 22, 2008 11:40 AM, Vincent Massol <vincent(a)massol.net> wrote:
then you shouldn't try to install it!
You could use an already setup xwiki farm instead.
-Vincent
Boah, that's a bit harsh, don't you think? It's like the old Linux
developer behavior. I like to play with new technology, but I'm not
a developer. I'm just a student who spend some spare time on IT-
topics. I do that because it's fun for me and because I think, when
I'm becoming a manager in a company, I understand the IT guys better
and that helps both sides. You on the other hand tell me I shouldn't
do that. Thanks a lot.
No, no you've misunderstood me :)
You were saying in your emails that you didn't want to try installing
xwiki and that you wanted to pay someone to do it for you. Hence my
suggestion to use an already installed version for testing/using XWiki
(i.e. a farm install like netcipia, the pro
xwiki.com farm, etc).
I'm more than happy that you install it, actually I even prefer that.
If you follow this list archive you'll see we've always been
supportive and answered questions from people trying to install it.
However since people are going to donate their time to help you, all
we ask is that in return you help the project in some way. For example
you can do this by improving the documentation or by writing a
tutorial for newbie, etc.
I think our misunderstanding came from the email I saw from you where
you stated that you were not technical and that you wanted someone to
do the install for you..
XWiki is very easy to install. Takes less than 10 seconds if you
follow the packaged distribution. Now if you want to do fancy things
(which you said you wanted to do) it's another matter which is btw
completely separate from XWiki (Apache has nothing to do with xwiki,
same as configuring your OS, knowing how to install a specific
database, etc).
Thanks
-Vincent
Thanks to the Howtos on
www.Howtoforge.com I'm
running a secured
dedicated Debian server with fully automated backup jobs, firewall
and so forth and I'm not even a "real" Linux freak. I was able to
run a CMS with a forum, over 400 active members and over 1 Terabyte
traffic a month (in 2 years, my server was not one time down). So
what's the point? Technology is only for guys who studied it? Well,
I thought technology is only as good as ppl can use it. Right now
you think XWIKI is only good to use it as a user, but I believe with
a little bit more polished documentation, advanced users (I'm not
talking about my grandma) could (I'm not saying they have to) be
able to install it by themself. That's all I was asking (not
demanding, that's a big difference!) for.