One of the beauties of a wiki is that much more information can be put into it because anyone can put information into it. That said, if it's done without care and some control, we find a mess after a short time. So we need to try to keep the principle of letting everyone contribute with little or no restriction but restrict people's ability to put stuff in. :-) I like the sandbox idea; but putting limits on its availability to the open public, either as contributors or as users, violates the original wiki principle. How about a parallel-tree implementation? There would be two trees, one rooted as "sandbox" and one as "certified", or some such. Every new contribution is flagged as "sandbox" and linked into the sandbox tree, but also linked appropriately by the contributor and/or editors into the category and/or project trees. Users would normally search on verified, conformant resources in the "certified" tree, but would have the clearly marked option of searching on unverified, tentative sandbox resources, too. Browsing indexes would contain all contributions, but the sandbox stuff would be highlighted, and maybe even turned on/off at the user's option. Access to the sandbox tree would be for editors and moderators, and all new contributions would be forced into the sandbox tree. As moderators, negotiating with editors and contributors, approve contributions, the "sandbox" link would be removed, leaving the contribution clean and already in its proper place in the wiki, and now available to the default search and unmarked as tentative or developmental or whatever. There would have to be a parallel sandbox portal, too, so editors wouldn't have to search through the entire wiki for the prospective contributions they want to work with. This parallel tree would mirror the certified tree, to make it easy for editors and moderators to see how it would fit into the certified wiki. Things to discuss would be how easy to make sandbox material available to normal users, how to ease discussions between team members and contributors, who gets to remove the sandbox flag, whether and how to distinguish "major" from "minor" edits, and likely other matters that don't come to my mind at the moment. And, of course, the first discussion would have to be whether this is even worth discussing in detail. I don't believe this proposal is premature, since implementation methods could influence opinions on the merits of FlaggedRevs vs. sandbox ideas, and indeed I believe I perceive a melding of the two concepts here. John Perry -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-wiki+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-wiki+help@opensuse.org