The recent Open Science SE site got shut down by StackExchange folks.
There is another proposal for the same right now http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/90201/open-science.
I am all for that proposal, trying to get open science
going again on SE.
However, an alternative is Discourse, created by Jeff Atwood, etal.
Example forums:
- Atom editor - https://discuss.atom.io/
- Discourse meta - https://meta.discourse.org/
- rOpenSci - https://discuss.ropensci.org/
We could put up our own forum. Benefits:
- We, the people involved in the forum, would run the forum - it can increase in size slowly w/o having to be subject to SE's rules
- It has a lot of the same features of SE (great UI, markdown support, multiple login options, badges), minus voting/points
We would have to pay server costs, but that's minimal for such a potentially big group of people.
If you're not familiar with Discourse, visit one of the links above and peak through some of the discussion threads.
Totally fine if this is shot down - just thinking out loud
Thanks, @sckott, for thinking of that option - I certainly did not have Discourse on my radar, and I agree that it would be useful to set the rules ourselves rather than have them forced upon us. I don't know Discourse, so I went in to the sites you listed and looked around a bit. It did not intrigue me, but I might find it acceptable if the community would actually use it.
I also had a look at Question2Answer, which is used by PhysicsOverflow, and I liked that better. Haven't yet dug deeper on this one either, though.
@noamross wrote:
These general topics are a very central part of interactions across the openscience community, so I think we should aim at using an infrastructure that promotes that. SE policies of discouraging example/ list/ broad questions stand in the way of that, and discussions held via Twitter and the blogosphere tend to be too ephemeral, too hard to follow and to re-discover or even to download in bulk.
As for carving out our corner in some existing SE sites, I'd find that too noisy if the core motivation is to follow #openscience matters.