User talk:ChaoticCoyote

Dyed armors
Hiya, I've seen your char's armors and they look great! :) Did ya mix the dyes yourself ? If so.....can I have the recipies ? Or at least the purple/amethyst one.....I've got a friend who loves that color.... -- Torins (talk) 13:06, 12 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Believe it or not, my necro's armor is died with plain old Purple. The Ascended Bonelace takes color *very* nicely, which is one reason I picked it. Alanora, my ranger, is in black (leggings and boots) and regular Blue Dye (Luxon top and greaves). -- ChaoticCoyote 13:09, 12 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Oh...ty anyway....well, since i'm posting here I'll ask this too: Can I use parts of your user page code on my user page? --[[Image:Animate_Flesh_Golem.jpg|25px]] Torins (talk) 13:14, 12 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Sure, I "borrowed" it from User:Gumby -- 13:20, 12 October 2006 (CDT)

About Builds
Given the lack of a sane review process, I'm somewhat reluctant to post builds on GuildWiki. As a professional writer, I'm concerned about the lack of *any* formal process. Looking through many votes, I see:


 * 1) Votes by people who never tried the build, and who don't even read the build text. Some of these comments are only a couple of words.
 * 2) Votes from those who recognize that the build works, but they don't like it personally.
 * 3) Votes based on a specific prejudice, i.e., "I don't like skill X, so this build sucks."

At this point, GuildWiki has no real requirements for voting on builds. Some sort of balance needs to be struck between the current free-for-all (re: meaningless) vote system, and an onerous process that would keep people from voting at all. My suggestion is:


 * 1) Someone posts a new build
 * 2) An editor (not the submitter) reviews the build for completeness, grammar, duplication, and technical accuracy, and moves it into the "ready for vote" category when the build is "clean." Note that this is *NOT* a vote on whether a build is good or bad.
 * 3) The build is placed into the voting queue for a month (or two weeks, or some reasonable time period). During that time,  people vote on the build as they do now. The author of the build can adjust it based on feedback.
 * 4) Admins should removed any vote that does not explain it's reasoning. To simply say "I like it" or "No rez, bad build" is useless; it shows that the voter did not pay any attention to the actual build, and just popped off an answer on a whim.
 * 5) After the voting period, the build is moved to either "favoured" or unfavoured" based on majority vote. This allows an admin to act as final editor -- not to reject or accept builds based on personal opinion, but to ensure theat the vote has any meaning.
 * 6) Perhaps the system could provide a "suggested list", from the admins, of build that are "featured for voting" this week, to spur voting. I suggest that admins be assigned to each profession, to nominate a build for the "suggest vote" list.

Having an "elite" squad of build reviewers defeats the purpose of having a wiki; the current chaotic system has no validity whatsoever. The wiki has too many partial and languishing builds, and people who spend time carefully crafting a build find their work ignored or treated poorly by the ignorati.

If the GuildWiki community is unwilling to develop a better system for posting builds, it might as well delete everything but specific "iconic" builds (or guides) and leave the debates to the forums.


 * In general, this is reasonable. However, I think 4 is unenforceable due to subjectivity.  You give two examples: "no rez, bad build" and "I don't like skill X, so this build sucks."  Outside of AB, lacking a resurrect is usually enough to make a non-monk, non-ganker/flagger bad.  Some skills are bad.  Some are bad enough that simply swapping that skill out for some other skill will change a build from bad to good.


 * If only a few people want to vote on builds, implementing your suggestions isn't going to change that. I'm not sure how you could reasonably encourage more people to contribute to the builds section.  We already have a "look at me and vote!" section on builds, though it only has one build at a time.


 * I'm not against wiping builds from GWiki but I don't feel strongly enough to try to champion a push to remove them. I was against having them from the very first on the grounds that everything involving builds is too subjective and it's too easy to lead builds away from their original contributor's purpose due to the collaborative process.  --Fyren 08:50, 15 October 2006 (CDT)