eric@snark.thyrsus.com (Eric S. Raymond) (12/10/90)
In my posting titled `Jargon File Editorial Philosophy' of 5 Dec 1990, I discussed several significant editorial issues in re the new Jargon File and invited comment from the net. My mailbox has since been well-stuffed with comments which were, in the main, thoughtful and carefully reasoned -- and supportive of my effort even when critical of various specific aspects of it. I post this to thank you all, to report the trends that have become apparent as I've read this mail and the various threads in alt.folklore computers, and to report my decisions on these issues based on current data. <OPEN ISSUES BEGIN HERE> ISSUE #1: THE PAST VS. THE PRESENT The consensus that the Jargon File ought to reflect primarily present usage rather than past history is overwhelming (more so, actually, than I had expected). Decision: I will continue updating examples to reflect current attitudes and usage, appending information on the evolution of those examples where it seems reasonable. I may get a bit more aggressive than I have been about changing minor ITS and PDP-10 references which were once explanatory but are now obfuscatory. Opinion is more divided on how much historical `tail' ought to be kept and how it ought to be organized. So far, a slim majority appears to favor my tactic of including historical material in a `high moby' appendix, but a strong minority favors returning the historical material to main text tagged `archaic' or `obsolete'. One or two posters advocated dropping the historical material entirely or spinning it off to a separate document. Decision: The present organization will be continued unless and until a clear consensus to re-merge the `low' and `high' mobies develops. Historical material will *not* be dropped. ISSUE #2: LEXICON OR ENCYCLOPEDIA? There is a very clear consensus for sticking to a lexicon format. There is no clear agreement, though, on what ought to be done with encyclopedic material. Most respondents didn't address this issue at all, or confounded it with issue #3. One poster who said he favored sticking to a lexicon format also encouraged me to write more inline `encyclopedia' entries and even inline some of the stuff in the preamble! Perhaps he was confused. A few others advocated putting the material in appendices. Decision: The guidance I got on this was vague and contradictory, and my own thinking is in a state of flux. Therefore, I'm not going to try and `improve' on the present disorganization; if a new encyclopedia-style entry looks like it wants to go in main text I'll put it there, and if it looks like appendix material I'll do that. This issue is still open. ISSUE #3: INCLUDE MORE FOLKLORE? Response was about evenly split between those favoring a folklore appendix and those proposing one or more separate documents dedicated to things like THE UNTIMELY DEMISE OF MABEL THE MONKEY. A few posters suggested I forget the whole idea, pointing out (possibly correctly) that it might involve too much extra work for me to be practical. Decision: For now, this stuff will go in an appendix. For one thing, some of the main text entries really need it for background. For another, there's a substantial amount of long-form material rescued from Steele-1983 (the out-of-print ``Hacker's Dictionary'' paper edition) that really deserves to be in the on-line File but doesn't really fit in a lexicon format -- and, since that pretty much forces me to have a folklore appendix anyhow, I might as well do it right. ISSUE #4: PROPER-NAME ENTRIES There was a clear consensus for continuing to include name references to individual hackers, and in fact for adding new ones. This surprised me a little. Those respondents who addressed the question at all were unanimous in agreeing that name references are valuable. One newbie said he very much wanted to have some pointers to the leading people in the culture. Others allowed as how that sort of thing could get out of hand but thought the effort to do it in a disciplined way desirable. Sentiment for keeping the pdl reference to Dave Lebling in was strong. On the other hand, only one poster expressed any concern about losing the `Lesser Quux' entries (and his problem was that he didn't want anyone else to re-use the nicknames inadvertently). One MIT hacker who claimed to be contemporary with Guy Steele wrote that nobody at MIT had ever heard of those people either, and that he'd always assumed they were in jargon-1 mainly to amplify Steele's running QUUX joke. Decision: I bow to the wisdom of the net, and reverse my previous inclination against name & network-address references to `name' hackers in the main text. Policy is now that you can be cited in the main text provided you're well-enough known not to need to be... The pdl@dm reference stays, with an xref to ZORK. The lesser quuxes go (there's precedent for this in Steele-1983, they're not there either). Larry Wall is now fingered under PERL and Henry Spencer under REGEXP. I'm open to suggestions as to who else should be in there. I'd prefer that `name' cites come as part of an entry about well-known software or hacker-history events. Please *email* these. That still leaves a lot of people eligible. Rich Salz? Dave Taylor? Erik Fair? Brad Templeton? Jef Poskanzer? Dan Heller? Gene Spafford? Rick Adams? (anybody wanna write a UUNET entry?) <OPEN ISSUES END HERE> Finally: Many of you wrote to say that you think I've done a terrific job; thank you. Some averred that I should ignore the few critics and nay-sayers entirely and do things ``my way''. While I appreciate the sentiment, I must respectfully decline the offered crown. I've ended up in the editorial role almost by accident and my conception of it requires that I function as a transparent instrument of the hacker culture (insofar as that is possible). This, to me, implies taking to heart criticisms from other people who care about the culture and trying to have as little ego in the way of being corrected as possible. I will, accordingly, continue to bend over backwards to accept and use critical input. -- Eric S. Raymond = eric@snark.thyrsus.com (mad mastermind of TMN-Netnews)