A sticky with links to all the wiki's would be extremely useful.
I would not do without this product, so when you read the following please understand it's sincere and offered with great respect for what you guys do.
You need a guy like Mikey in the Life cereal commercials. If Mikey can negotiate features and use them with some degree of ease, you're not going to get allot of complaints about documentation or loose customers who perceive Media Center as too complicated. To support this criticism, I offer the following:
I've been playing with panel and trying to figure out why my playlists and smartlist were not appearing. With much effort searching for instructions, and then trying to use the instructions, I've been able to somewhat get his working, however, unless I did this regularly, I would never remember how it's done. The settings are very complicated and in a language that is not intuitive for a person who does not eat and breath Media Center at low levels. The developers did a wonderful job providing the functionality. What's missing is the presentation to make it useable for end users. Someone who is not intimate with the settings and structure should try it and see for themselves. It all works perfectly when done properly but getting there is certainly an investment of time, and I got to believe too difficult for some. I assume there is a complicated reason why playlists and smartlists from the client aren't carried over to panel by default, but that feature would be very sweet. Every time I make some kind of list, I need to go do something again for it to appear in Panel and it's not something like just checking a box. If playlist can't be carried over by default, simplifying how to get them there and presenting the options in plain language would add a lot of value. In the business world I came from, this functionality would have to be configured in house by a trained lower level technical person, not a end user.
That being said, the ability to manipulate the software for panel is terrific and it all works!
Human nature leads people to assume the confusion they face with tools like this are a problem (technical deficiency) within themselves, and they likely give up, or just complain about a lack of documentation :}. A Mikey test with this and other user configurable options I bet would result in a simplified presentation and bring in/back users who go elsewhere for a more comfortable/easy solution
As I said, I'm not going anywhere else. Media Center for me is truly kid in a candy store fun, and I certainly don't want it dumbed down for mass consumption. like an Apple product, but pendulums swing and MC sometimes is on the opposite end of the swing from something like Itunes. A happy middle ground on usability would serve the product well.
As Cobert says, "Meanwhile", early Happy Thanksgiving
Larry