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Many of the people crunching output on public Scrapbox projects are “one-person projects”.
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There is some useful information here and there on individual projects, and there are indications that it would be interesting if they were well connected.
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Maybe they are not on board with “let’s create a joint project and do it there” (more discussion on why this is).
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I sometimes wish Scrapbox had a “serendipity feature between projects”.
- but it creates dependencies between “projects” that could have been considered “independent” until now.
- In the first place, it seems to be a rare case that this functionality is needed, so it is not a priority to devote development man-hours to it.
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How about crawling the public project periodically (like once a day) and automatically reprinting it in the private project (PP)? - Machine reads Scrapbox
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Invite the author of each public project to PP
- It doesn’t matter if you participate or not.
- Since automatic reprinting is reproduction, is it important to explicitly tell them and make it look like you have permission to do so?
- I suppose if the members of the private group are small enough, you could say “it’s a reproduction for private use,” but the boundaries are blurred and it’s better to get the author’s permission.
- If you make the private group only for yourself, you can experiment without permission, so you can try it that way first.
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Better if there is a mechanism for authors to know when their writing has been reprinted on PP and then edited.
- Include the project name in the title when reprinting.
- Send change notifications to Slack
- You can find out by searching Slack with your project name.
- Is there a better way…
- A bot that watches Slack notifications and assigns those that meet certain criteria to individual channels
- Or a bot to throw on Twitter at least once a day.
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If there is an update at the main site after it has been reprinted on PP
- If there are no updates in PP, simply overwrite…
- Marge?
- Keep old ones with dates?
- Create a diff page?
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