Possible Duplicate:
Create a guided tour for new users
Yes, I've read all the faqs here and on the stack exchange site I joined only yesterday, meta and otherwise. I know about the off-site Wikibook guide but what there really needs to be is a simple new-user guide to how the interface and system works.
I wasted a lot of time to either figure out or ferret out by various searches on how such simple things as... why I couldn't find a way to add a comment to a list of them, but could post the same query as a partial answer? Even understanding the user page, yes, there're some pop-up info fields for some of the items, but for one example, what does 'Recent Names' indicate?? A FAQ is not the same as a userguide, both in its organization and utility. And watching a video is a slow way to look something up.
There were places and stumblings where my time was wasted - and that means every new user of the Stack Exchange engine (SEE? :) wastes some of their time. Yes, there's always a learning curve but as developers we're always trying to reduce it. I'm an old pharte with computers; I've been playing with them for about forty years and making my living with them for over thirty years, and the first and most important thing I learned about them is they mean you should never have do the exact same thing twice.
Whether it's auto-completion or macros in a wordprocessor, automated document assembly for lawyers, the 20-year old technology of voice-recognition, -control, and -dictation, or if-then-else or do-while or arrays, computers automate our tasks and make our lives easier by reducing repetitive actions (among other things). And that doesn't mean just for one user at a time - a user guide or help structure or whatever you want to call it - is an array or database of information, organized and indexed - and will help each future new user by stopping them from having to ferret out the information on their own. Isn't that what SEE is all about? Looking up information that's already been compiled?
So, does anyone else think this sounds like a good idea?