Is it possible to separate GINT and OpenGround Forums? Or at least have tags to tell posts apart?
EDIT: Since there is significant overlap in the features of each program, text searches are very likely to provide results for the wrong program. Even if Bentley's ultimate goal is to somehow merge these softwares, it muddies the water for current and legacy users.
This would be very helpful. If I am searching for OpenGround posts, I would like to filter out the gINT posts. Since many of the gINT posts do not include tags, I have not found a way to do this yet.
Hi both
On the Communities home screen, select from the: Go to a topic or product community drop down list, select: Keynetix , then Select Wiki, on the left you will see a menu, which includes OpenGround Cloud and Keynetix, if you expand these, they will contain only these products. Hope that helps
Hi Mel,
That does help for wiki articles. (What is the difference going forward with Keynetix and OpenGround topics, are they interchangable?)
However, it does not really help with posts on the user forums. Although a poster can add tags if they want, there is no way to see tags in the forum or filter by tags. Also, there was no reason for GINT users to tag there posts here until recently.
Keynetix was the company that Bentley acquired to gain the product now know as OpenGround Cloud.I was referring to gINT and OpenGround. They are two distinctly different applications.
To create a forum focused on geotechnical data management related topics we have already separated out the data management product lines (gINT, Keynetix, OpenGround) from the geotechnical analysis products (Plaxis, SV Designer etc.). In some circumstances it can be beneficial for users to view / share experiences across related product lines. However, we will explore options to improve the tagging, naming and filtering of posts to help users quickly locate relevant threads.
Thanks for separating the forums into application specific ones, lots of conversations are application specific, separating them makes things easier to navigate.