On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 8:42 PM Rowan Tommins <rowan.coll...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On 12/04/2023 19:05, tag Knife wrote:
> > I say this as someone who was trying to onboard themselves the other day
> > (web-php and php-docs).
> > The entire process is archaic and uses "tools" from 20 years ago.
> > Onboarding for anything you're interested in doesn't really give a
> > direction at all (unless you're a dev).
> > It mostly boils down "do this, do that, after that figure it out yourself".
>
>
> I'd like to draw attention to a non sequitur between the above, totally
> valid criticism, and the below:
>
>
> > It really shows php's age that you have to join a mailing-list to even get
> > generic user support, let alone participate in development.
>
>
> None of the above has anything to do with it being a mailing list per
> se. You could have just as bad an experience trying to sign up for a web
> forum, or a chat room, or something-something-blockchain-ai-javascript.
>
> But to repeat: the complaints about the sign-up process are totally
> valid. I don't know enough about the system involved to make them
> smoother, but there's no reason signing up for a mailing list can't be
> as simple as enter address, confirm address, done. By all accounts, the
> PHP ones are not.
>
>
> > Look at the "Make WordPress" page compared to php's "Get Involved" page and
> > the overall onboarding experience is so much nicer and improved.
> > People can get a general idea of how teams works, their goals, who's
> > leading who,
> > with helpful guides and direction to get people started.
>
>
> I agree to a point. My first impression of the Wordpress page you
> mention is that it's kind of overwhelming with the number of different
> teams, and it's mostly a directory of Slack channels, I think? (Hurrah,
> another Slack workspace to separately sign into on every device!) A more
> apt comparison is probably to https://www.php.net/mailing-lists.php
>
> What is probably lacking both there and the "Get Involved" page is a
> more direct statement that Internals is the central communication hub
> for the project. The mailing list page describes it as "A medium volume
> list for those who want to help out with the development of PHP" which
> is accurate but entirely unhelpful.
>
>
> Which brings me back to my earlier point: I wonder how much of the
> reaction is really about e-mail itself, and how much is just the
> documentation and sign-up forms you encounter *before* you hit the list.
> Because if it's the latter, migrating the entire community to a new
> platform won't help - we'll still suck at introducing anyone to that
> platform - and most of what we need is someone who's good with words to
> update some website copy.
>
> Regards,
>
> --
> Rowan Tommins
> [IMSoP]
>
> --
> PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
> To unsubscribe, visit: https://www.php.net/unsub.php
>

Heh,

> Hurrah,
> another Slack workspace to separately sign into on every device!

>From working at Automattic for nearly 6 years, I can say that they are
indeed, a very Slack-heavy organization. They used it very well
though, maybe too well ;)

- Rob

--
PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
To unsubscribe, visit: https://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to