On Sun, Jul 01, 2012 at 08:34:01AM +1000, Craig Small wrote: > > "pet projects" as the price we need to pay to make participation in > > Debian very attractive (not even talking about the role that "pet > That's a good way of putting it. Also who can predict what is really a > pet project. I bet the first medical related project that was ITP'ed > on Debian people were thinking 'huh, why that here?' and yet I hear now > there is quite a large and vibrant community around this sort of thing.
To base the feelings expressed here on numbers I evaluated the questionaire for Debian Med developers Charles was hinting to[1]. We have 9DDs + 1DM inside Debian only because the Debian Med project exists. Of these 10 people 7 extended their scope to other teams (some of them by leaving Debian Med more or less completely to focus on other tasks). I would like to stress that one of the main ideas behind Debian Pure Blends is to dive deeply into very specific fields and "hunt" for the specialists there to make Debian the distribution of choice for specific workfields. I tried to graph this idea on slide 13 of my Banja Luka talk last year[2] and in the same way on slide 8 of my recent talk in Grenoble[3] were I did put the focus on the fact that Debian does not simply carry random medical stuff but we should rather see the Debian Med project which made quite good progress to advertise Debian in the world of biology and to some extend in medical care (which is a bit harder). It is my very strong opinion that if we manage to settle into different workfields with an exceptional quality we will gain for much more users (und thus potential developers) via cross-connections to other fields. When I started the MoM project[4] I kept this in mind to train the experts in specific programs (were I as a generalist have no good chance to test) some packaging skills. As some result I can say we now have established quite strong connection to an upstream community for a very powerful hospital management system (VistA) which finally could enable us to establish pure Debian in large hospitals once the packaging is finalised. The underlying database system (MUMPS) is also used in some GIS applications (at least Ean Schuessler expressed some interest because of this) which somehow proves my point of cross connections. We also have Debian Edu that made a big progress in schools, we have a GIS team, a multimedia team, a games team and others which to my perception are not that visible as they should. We also have Debian Science which is a great resource to start into more specific sciences and I think the last Debian Science workshop was a good start for doing so. In short: I would not consider specific packages as pet programs but rather as an exceptional chance for Debian to spread into specific fields and find new engaged users there because they do not find support by some other system. Kind regards Andreas. [1] http://wiki.debian.org/DebianMed/Developers [2] http://people.debian.org/~tille/talks/20110728_blends/ [3] http://people.debian.org/~tille/talks/20120625_debian-med/ [4] https://wiki.debian.org/DebianMed/MoM -- http://fam-tille.de -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20120703071107.ga4...@an3as.eu