Well, there is a sticky index at the top of the forum which has links to all the handbooks & guides.
But threads also see activity when new content appears which is relevant to them. Then those threads should see some activity, and should be more visible than similarly old threads which don't have any new relevant content.
IMHO a wiki could do the indexing better, and might be a better way to display the finished product, but how could it handle the flow of attention for contributors?
In other words, as a work environment for contributors seeking interesting things to help build, how is a Wiki better than a forum?
See sticky index thread. It's not hard to find old threads.
Cheers, -- N
The sticky threads requires the original poster of the thread to append new handbooks into the top post, else they (the links to new handbooks) end up in the multi-page mire of posts and re-posts and discussions. It works, but it's not elegant.
As for the work environment, I don't actually see it changing all that much. In all likelihood the "rough draft" of a guide or handbook will be posted in much the same way as it already is, discussion will happen, then information will be transcribed or consolidated into a Wiki at the author's discretion/motivation.
Unless, that is, they make guides and handbooks against the CoC, which doesn't make much sense since they're not exactly a burden on the community except when someone goes on a bumping spree because they want them all on page 1.
Really, it's not a zero-sum system: you can have a wiki and a thread.