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I think is a cool idea, and conceptually it would really be nice to get an understanding of how people use the application. But practically, I feel like there's no real way to reach a statistically significant number of current users and get the kind of information we need. If we post something on Trilium's current GitHub we'll get data biased likely towards developers that are active and looking at GitHub discussions. There are plenty of non-developer users of Trilium. As for using a pop-up survey in current Trilium, we would need Zadam to do that which I'm not sure he would want to. Also from a UX standpoint, popups like that when you first open the app are often ignored and closed by users to their annoyance. I'm happy to be told I'm wrong but that's what I found during my research during grad school. |
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What about voting and discussing a backlog of features? We could see in time priorities of the majority. |
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Hey! So, before we get too deep into the weeds, I realized that I was thinking about the changes I would like to personally make to Trilium as a developer and realized that I don't really know how other people use Trilium, why they use it, and what they would want out of improvements to it.
I think it would probably be a good idea to either have a survey constantly available for people to submit feedback/bug reports through that can be used to automatically create GitHub issues or discussions but also relieve the burden on users with less experience leveraging standard tech systems.
I also think it would be a good idea to have a survey pop-up or something of that nature where users can say, hey, this is a thing I'm really missing, or other such feedback after they have been using Trilium for a while.
Another option depending on the size of the user base would be to have that survey pop up as multiple choice questions that they can submit or not, and those will give us insight into what the community is frustrated with.
Others probably know more than me about this as I am very new to thinking about such things, but I do think we need to be very careful to not get so excited about the possibility for new features we think are cool that we lose sight of the people that will keep this project alive through usage as well.
Plus, who knows, seeing what people are actually having problems with may lead to other cool new features that other tools don't have.
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