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Le 2011-10-03 09:03, Christoph Noack a écrit :
Hi Marc,

cool to hear you ... I hope everything is fine(er) now!

Thanks. I should know by December if I need to go back in again. Slow to cure and I am constantly told to be patient.



Am Sonntag, den 02.10.2011, 22:11 -0400 schrieb Marc Paré:
Le 2011-09-29 17:04, Christoph Noack a écrit :
Hi Marc, all!

Am Donnerstag, den 29.09.2011, 12:42 -0400 schrieb Marc Paré:
Le 2011-09-28 21:55, Ivan M. a écrit :
[...]
WHAT: Improve the Download Page on our website
WHERE: http://www.libreoffice.org/download/
WHY: It's not very usable for less experienced users, and it could
look a lot better too
HOW: Decide on a new design and implement it in HTML/CSS/JS
WHO: Anyone interested, and myself
WHEN: As soon as possible...

[...]

All thoughts - requirements, texts, website structure - are here:
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Design/Whiteboards/Download_Page

[...]

Nice! I like the design. IMO, the less verbose the better for our new
users. Users are interested in downloading, installing and using right
away. But there are still some issues.

Let's see :-)

One of the recurring questions from users is that of Java ("Do we need
to download/install Java?"). For a new user to LibreOffice, this would
not be evident from your mockup and he/she would just assume that
everything needed would come included in the one download.

Do they need Java to run LibreOffice? As far as I remember Java is still
optional (decreased dependency) and rather a question for people
migrating from OpenOffice.org. So, it is something for "Installing
Instructions" - the placeholder is already there.

I guess the true test would be to put the page into use and see if we still get questions about Java. I believe we get questions mostly from Windows users. Not sure about Mac's but Linux normally does not have a problem with this as most distro's will already have Java installed on the systems.



I also like the fact that there is a short descriptive section on the FR
download site ("Quels fichiers télécharger" [Which Files to Download?])
where it displays the needed files for all three supported OS's. This
again, for a new user would not be evident on the mockup.

Since cleanliness of the page was important for me, I checked with
Christian whether the files for download could be made dependent on the
operating system (like today). So instead offering the user everything
he could download (for system he never heard of *g*), we offer him the
pre-selection for his OS - which should be sufficient for 99.5% of all
use case. If the user needs to download other versions, then:
       * he can change the "Computer system" setting
       * he can check out "All Downloads"

For example, the Linux Download page mentions all three downloads - for
Windows you only have the Help Pack that could be added optionall.
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/cgi_img_auth.php/8/80/2011-07-01_DownloadPage_Features_Linux_Expanded.png



Sounds good. I guess if all of the necessary files are listed for the platforms, then it does serve this purpose well.

I would also suggest a "Corporate Use" link on the right hand side as we
are also getting more questions about which version is for corporate
use. This link could also help streamline help for corporate use --
maybe send them off to a FAQ targeted for corporate use? Alternatively,
we could have a "Corporate use version" on the second tier menu with a
version specifically targeted to corporate use with accompanying links
to help files such as "large scale installation" and "professional
services" offerings etc.

Well, this has been discussed in-depth some time ago ... according to
our release schedule, there are only two versions "the more stable", and
the "the newer features" version. The latter refers several times to
"cooperations and large-scale deployments". The only thing missing is
the FAQ (or similar info) - can be linked from e.g. "Release Notes and
Known Issues" or "Installing Instructions". Then, we keep the download
page quite clean. Well, if company admins use our download page at
all :-)

Even if we did not have an ultra-hardened version, we should make it easier for corporations to find information for large scale installations a little more easy. Maybe this would mean providing a tab or link on one of the download sub-menus to take them to a FAQ-type page.

I was just wondering, you say "Well, if company admins use our download page at all." Where else would they get the necessary files?


However, if we offer a special "ultra-hardened" version, its simple to
add that (at the beginning, I've started with this idea). Traveling back
in time...
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/index.php?title=Design/Whiteboards/Download_Page&oldid=26394#Versions_Descriptions

I think if these issues were dealt with on the download page mockup, it
would make for a great page.

I don't know whether my answers have been sufficient ... I think it
still fits. And even if its not perfect, each small step towards a
better download experience is a great step :-)

Cheers,
Christoph



Yes, it all sounds good. Thanks for all that info.

Marc


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