> *5. Deployer * > a person who has deployed OpenSolaris Desktop, not OpenSolaris. > (Their experience should be shared in some public forums, blogs > or otherwise, > not sure should there be a minimum number of depoyment) >Don't know what you are driving at here. If somebody works for a large >company and deploys to thousands of desktops, then should they be given >a grant on OpenSolaris.org? If so, if somebody is blogging or discussing >OpenSolaris Desktops elsewhere, then I think that the Advocacy community >is a better fit here. - Doug Scott
I think a 'deployer' is more of a 'distributor'??? Yet, the meaning may slip into those who BUILD and/or develop OpenSolaris-based distros (i.e. near equivalent to Martux, Belenix, Nexenta, Schillix) and/or distributes distros (i.e. Genunix, ISVs, independent distro providers), or just deploys/implements OpenSolaris-based distros within a mid-to-large corporate/educational/non-profit environment. Now "core contributor" is usually someone who submits patches, documents, tests, builds, modifies, implement, and/or develops code related to desktop technology associated with the desktop-discuss community - involved in a "contributor" type role at least 2-3 years (i.e. or through a contributor-type status (i.e. consultants/developer/package maintainer(s) through a Sun partner/ISV channel or Sun-employee involved in desktop technologies) and seen as a SENIOR contributor. I'd consider a 'core contributor' is somewhat known by the original developers (or ISVs) of the desktop-related code and has some sort of relationship or influence in the involvement of desktop-related code for patches/features/roadmaps/implementations/ports... I hope that adds some clarity on the subject... Ken Mays This message posted from opensolaris.org
