As well as being searchable from within VSCode's extensions catalog, published extensions appear in a web marketplace.
The Docker extension is a good example of how these can look:
https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=PeterJausovec.vscode-docker
The top of the page features the extension icon and a banner colour (already mentioned in #34 ). Below that is a kind of single-page documentation for the extension. The docker one bullet-points some key benefits, then has sections for each of the features that installing it will add to VSCode complete with a selection of looping videos and screenshots.
I'd like us to start working on the catalog page for our extension. Firstly because we're going to need one, and secondly because if we describe what we're planning for it to be in this way then we can show it to people and say "would you download this? If not, what else would you be looking for?" etc.to validate whether we're making an extension folks will want to use!
Before we publish the extension, the GitHub readme seems a great place to do this work. In fact, just look at the GitHub readme for the Docker extension:
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-docker
(Spoiler: it looks the same as the marketplace page!)
Let's include the highest fidelity we have for anything we want to show in there e.g. if we talk about the "start a new Fabric chaincode project" bit, we could include a video of this actually happening since @Heatherp has already got an implementation of that bit :)
Meanwhile if we're talking about automatically spinning up the local_fabric connection, we could include a screenshot from @simran-sohanpal 's latest mockups.
I'd like us to create the page now, then update it as the project continues - it'll also form an excellent basis to give us a headstart on writing the docs once we know where they are going to live.