That's pretty interesting how lotuselan.net incorporated posts from both a yahoo group and itself in a seaL I feel like you that anything I post on the Internet is available for someone -anyone- to either appreciate or deride later. It wouldn't occur to me to expect anyone to think his posts would be protected from view by "outsiders" but then there are all kinds.
I also like the idea of a wiki! (What do you think, Joe?)
It's probably just me being ultra cautious but I've personal experience of people getting irate when they think their work is being used without permission. I'd once taken some facts from a book I'd read (and quoted the reference at the page bottom) but some guy saw it and was convinced I'd pinched it from his own website. Threatening all sorts at the time, completely unhinged IMO and it took a scan of the appropriate page with the suggestion to sue the publisher instead to calm him down. Hence it's the "once bitten" approach on such things.
On to more interesting things like the LotusElan.net wiki.
That's a slow progress job, probably because there's only Jeff working on it and he's a busy guy. We did have an Elise wiki which started around the time of the S1 over here and that's helpful. I think the trick is to get the chapters/headings right and then allow multiple contributors to chip in with someone (or a small team) monitoring input every now and then to prevent duplication.
It's no different in reality from this forum and the search engine, the main advantage seems to be that the data is filed in a more logical place; for example all the brake stuff is filed
....wait for it...
under "Brakes"
So it's easier to get to. There's loads of data in the knowledgebase but getting it out is hit and miss. Search works fine but often you get either no results or a page full and the only way is to check every entry. For example last year I was looking for the relationship between rear shim and tracking, mostly just to see if others had similar to what I was finding. The data is there but it took a few hours to condense out, whereas if it had been in a section marked "rear suspension" or "Alignment" then it would have been instant.
(that's not a complaint BTW, just an observation of how things have changed)