Hi gold_finger,
I think a couple of the challenges when you first start with LL(Linux),
1. Where do I start.?, The user manual, so this should be the key focus.
Coming from Windows where for a user it was more or less switch it on, follow the install prompts/guide and away you go.
2. Then there is the terminology, already mentioned by
bitsnpcs(good one),
An A-Z of the most common "
terms" and "
commands" would be useful. So 2 new sections?
>
FAQ = Frequently Asked Questions, there could be links back to any already existing "How To's" in the Forum
>
CUC = Commonly Used Commands, These are the ones that people like yourself ask for on a regular basis.
3. I think there is already an enormous amount of information, answers and solutions within the forum...But
If you are new and not familiar with LL(Linux), and maybe English is not your 1st language, deciding what to "search" for can be a challenge.
This one is more a challenge, and potentially to much of a resource burden and drain on people like your good self...
It needs the creations of some form indexed/reference knowledge section with just one liners, bit like a mini-wiki.
See if I can explain,, Create a section, say "
Common & Known Solutions and Answers"
Break it into Key subject areas,
Install ,
Software ,
Hardware and
Configuration There would be sub categories under each of the main subject areas, These get added to when new subjects arise.
Now each time a solution to an an issue/question is found, a one liner and link to the relevant post/source is added in the relevant category.
Example of how it could work/look,, I'm having an issue with a Bluetooth Device,
So I go and look in the
Hardware >
Bluetooth section
I see some one liners, and something that sounds like my issue, and a link to click on, like this...
Hardware Bluetooth One liner 1 + Link
One liner 2 + Link
Enabling Full Bluetooth Support in Linux Lite =
https://www.linuxliteos.com/forums/index.php?topic=558.0 One liner 3 + Link
Just my thoughts...
Obviously, like I said, it would put a lot on the shoulders of the mods & devs, and maybe just to much of an ask..??
and like all knowledge systems they are are only as good as the content, and relevance = "Ongoing Maintenance"
Otherwise they become stale and out of date.
Dave