Hi Jack & al.,
Yes, this is precisely what I'm working on during my 'vacation' time: revise and extend RBA's guide to turn it into an official guide. A few days ago I contacted Rogelio personally to prepare my work on this topic. I take again the opportunity to say thanks publicly to Rogelio for his excellent and helpful work.
I like Sander's idea about a standard document structure. However I tend to be somewhat less 'formal' in this case because the same scheme cannot be applied to all tools, or at least not in the same way. But this is essentially the idea and we basically agree.
This revision/extension work will generate two sub-products:
- An official PixInsight Reference Guide, which will be available on our corporate website for public download. It will be available as a tree of XHTML documents, and will be updated regularly as new tools are created and existing ones are improved. This guide will also include brief practical examples along with tool descriptions, and extended information/discussions about key image processing topics (e.g. color management, RGB working spaces, multiscale processing, etc.). If you know the old PI LE documentation, then you can better figure out how it will be.
- A set of reference documents that will be included with all PixInsight distributions. This reference material, which will be basically the same available in the official Reference Guide (but organized in a different, more 'granular' way), will be accessible from the PixInsight Core application with a special, integrated help browser (basically a customized version of Qt's Assistant application). This is very close to what Sander has described.
So this is already (and will be during the next weeks/months) a work in progress.
There will be an official user guide for PixInsight. This is an official statement 
Regarding all of those recent forum messages about PI, I basically agree with Rogelio's point of view. It's pretty boring to say the least. Those of you that know me from this forum or personally, know also that I am always open to constructive criticism. I try to be a very self-critical person, probably too much in many instances, but I always prefer to have an excess of self-criticism to compensate for the dangerous possibility of self-pride. However, I never pay attention to destructive criticism.
Resistance to PixInsight --including some people trying to cause failure of the PixInsight project-- isn't something new to me. Recall that I'm in this 'business' since 2003. It hasn't been an easy way in
any way since then. I think I have quite an accurate idea of the reasons behind that resistance. Besides the logical doubts and concerns of people considering the purchase of a new software tool --which I understand perfectly, and for that reason we have a trial license--, there are pathological reasons such as fear of what is new or different or unknown, and fear to lose what they (think that they) have, among others. PixInsight is all about not having fear at all. It is not to go against anything; it is just to build something new and powerful, to turn image processing into something exciting and creative. PixInsight is all about culture and development. Personally I feel stronger and more excited than ever in this project, so be sure that destructive criticism does not hurt me at all.