Thanks for the feedback Hal, In the spirit of release early and release often, I spent time putting together a package, but no website. The functionality is really limited and I was hoping to attract users that are prepared for that. As Diaria matures I will defiantly add a website with a manual and tutorial. BTW, you perfectly captured my intensions with the name of the project. I know I have logorrhea now and then. http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?logorrhea Hal Fulton wrote: > > I'm interested in this, but I confess I find it hard to motivate > myself to download something, unzip it, and poke around around > for the docs, just to find out how it works. > > That's not an attack on you or anyone else, nor a slur on anyone's > project. But I like it when the docs are online. That way I can > painlessly look at something and say, "Well, I need these six > features; it's only got five of those"; etc. > > I urge you (and everybody) to consider putting the docs on the > web. > > By the way, the name is hilarious. I realize it comes from "diary" > (cf. Latin dia "day", Spanish "dias", etc.). > > I assume it's pronounced "diarrhea"? :) When I first saw it, I > thought it might be an actual error by a non-English speaker. Then > I decided it must be tongue-in-cheek. After all, many blogs I've > seen are reminiscent of "verbal diarrhea." > > For non-English speakers here: "Diarrhea" is a mild illness that > is both unpleasant and inconvenient. Enough said. > > > Cheers, > Hal > > >