anarcat <anar...@debian.org> writes: > You all have an impressive technical curriculum. Your deeds in Debian > speak for themselves. However, the role of a project leader is unusually > non-technical. In fact, you will have to abandon significant technical > tasks to tend to more "administrative" or "leadership" tasks the DPL > role requires.
That I may have impressive technical contributions is something I tend not to believe. You see, even though I am a software engineer by trade, (which trade happens to be my hobby), my true passion lies with words and human arts. It's a twisted turn of events that my hobby supports my passion, and not the other way around. As such, leaving (some|most) of the technical stuff behind, and exchanging it for administrativa, mediation, lots and lots of communication, inspiration and all those things is not going to be something new. In various settings, I've had experience doing all that already. > Why are you good candidates for that role? What social skills do you > bring to the community in terms of mediation and leadership? I'm pretty darn good at mediation, did that both inside Debian (see an example shortly below) and outside of it. It is something I find challenging and satisfying, an area where I have had great success in the past, an area I find particularly interesting (people *are* interesting in general). I speak, I teach, I coach regularly on various topics (Debian included, of course), other times, I use a handful of magic dust, and make things simple. On other occassions, I evangelise. One of my fondest moments of recent years were hearing these words - said very quietly under her breath -, by a person who's been hating GNU/Linux for the past decade or so: "Can you get me a Debian sticker? I love Debian." Other times, I listen, and just stay invisible. To illustrate my skills, let me briefly mention a few accomplishments: - We have the Budapest Clojure User Group meetups running, even though it is still a nieche language, and out of the ~15-20 people who attend the meetups, most of them don't even use Clojure. They found the events and their 'advertisement' interesting. They keep coming back for more. I help organise these events, I talk, and I help bring people in. That's administrativa, communication and inspiration right there. ;) - In a few months, I will spend 100% of my paid time working on free software. I started the initiative at work, I made compromises (like the status quo of 50% support / 50% free software work), I made the case for it, and did not back down even when things looked bleak. I made them want it too. This even involved financial stuff, which I dislike, a lot. Many people in different positions and ideals had to be persuaded, they had to be enlightened, and they had to become motivated to help me push this deal through. - I gave Debian packaging tutorials at work (at one point, we gave a ~6 hour marathon of it with my former boss, that was wicked awesome [not my words, either]), which are in such high demand that I will have to give more. There's one more feat I'm particularly proud of, you'll find it below, because that also answers your last question. > How would you have dealt with the difficult decisions the previous DPL > had to make regarding various conflicts or problems that occurred during > his mandate(s)? Would you have intervened? How? This is something I'd rather not answer, on one hand, because it would take too long, and on another, because in the most interestring (for some values of interesting, anyway) cases, I simply do not have enough historical data to see the whole picture, therefore can't make a well informed judgement, either. > Could you give an example of such a situation where you have > successfully mediated a (potential) conflict? Which tools did you use to > deal with the situation? Although this happened years and years ago, when I was young, foolish and hot-headed, there's one particular feat I'm proud of to this day. I was an Application Manager at the time, and there was this particular person who pissed off pretty much everyone in existence: ftp-masters, prominent maintainers and project members, the Debian Account Manager. So much so, that he had multiple threads over the course of a few months (if I recall correctly) all complaints about his behaviour. We worked together to resolve these issues, it took a long time, but in the end, he ended up becoming a Debian Developer, worked with the very same people whom he pissed off before, and some amazing things were accomplished later on. While skirmishes did occur later too, things did turn out fairly well for everyone in the end. To this day, I'm proud that I helped him achieve that, that with our combined work, he'd become a great collegue to work with the same people who strongly objected to him even applying for a Debian Developer position. This was a tough and dire situation, at a time when I wasn't half as much prepared, not half as much experienced as I am now. -- |8] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-vote-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87fvzrbl5j....@galadriel.madhouse-project.org