The best laid schemes o' mice an' men
Gang aft a-gley.Robert Burns, To a Mouse, on Turning Her Up in Her Nest With the Plough, 1785

In my previous article—The beginning—I drew from my personal experience and tried to present an overview of the activities that any website designer would encounter.  This article summarises those activities in point form, as a kind of checklist, in preparation for the website’s public launch.

You may find this checklist helpful.

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And the world will be better for this,
That one man, scorned and covered with scars,
Still strove with his last ounce of courage,
To reach the unreachable star.Joe Darios, “The Impossible Dream” Man of La Mancha, 1965

the impossible dreamBy now I hope that you’ve read my previous articles—Before there was a beginning, Before the dawn of the beginning, The dawn of the beginning and Prelude to the beginning—and you have some understanding of the sequence of  events that led to my decision to create a website to draw attention to some of the problems that I see with the Joomla! project.  It wasn’t for lack of trying to show that I’ve spent months thinking about this and it wasn’t an impulsive decision but, by sharing a record of my deliberations, I hope my notes may help other people if they’re intending to follow in my footsteps.

You may be wondering why someone hasn’t tried this before?  If someone has then I would be pleased to know because I haven’t seen something like this before.

Creating a website is fairly easy.  Getting other people on-board with is not your “field of dreams”.  There’s a lot of planning that goes into building a website.  This article covers some of the behind-the-scenes activities that went into this website.

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We’ve all spent years preparing
Before this band was born
With heaven's help it blended
And we do thank the lord.Terry Kath, “Introduction” Chicago Transit Authority, 1969

sandboxing cycleIn my previous article—The dawn of the beginning—I outlined the case for reforming the Joomla! forum to overcome the undesirable presence of fake users, spuriously-created new forum accounts and the burden these things impose on the forum moderators who spend their time “taking out the garbage”.  As I hope you will agree, the questions I asked in relation to these matters are worthy of answers.  I was disappointed, though, that my questions posted at the Joomla! forum did not receive the kind of support I had hoped for.

It was the conspicuous absence of the Joomla! forum management team in the debate that disturbed me most.  Perhaps this “conspicuity”—not acknowledging that contentions exist—is a characteristic of groupthink behaviour?  Or, put another way, the team is counting on burying perceived threats [to it] as quickly as possible simply by not having to respond to them.

Virtue signalling is the conspicuous communication of moral values and good deeds.  The term has negative connotations as it is commonly used to denote virtuous actions and statements are motivated by a desire for social status and self-satisfaction.  In recent years, the term has been more commonly used within groups to criticise those who are seen to value the expression of virtue over action.

Although my observations were apparently not generating much support at the Joomla! forum, I would have been content to allow things to subside were it not for a surprise celebrity intervention; that intervention caused me to radically reappraise my ideas—in a good way—and commit to an entirely different approach, ultimately resulting in what you’re reading now.  You will have to read more of this article to discover the details about that intervention and how it changed my thoughts.

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