I would recommend calling out people in the new quarterly reports, maybe as it's own section, rather than GNOME Journal or the release notes.
Paul On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 1:23 PM, Sriram Ramkrishna <s...@ramkrishna.me>wrote: > > > On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 10:45 AM, Brian Cameron <brian.came...@sun.com>wrote: > >> >> >> >> For example, we get three people writing in to say the new bugzilla is >>> awesome and it saves them 30 minutes a day finding bugs to work on, so >>> the board writes a recommendation on Max/Olav/sys admin team member page >>> saying "Mike's work on bugzilla was extremely helpful to GNOME users. >>> Several users wrote into say that they save 30 minutes at a time during >>> their work day because of the improvements that Mike made. Mike's work >>> exemplifies the GNOME mission of making computing accessible and easy >>> for everyone." >>> >> >> It might be cool to have a "Thank You" Wiki on live.gnome.org >> where we archive these sorts of recommendations or "thank yous". Aside >> from making our community more friendly and personal, it would have >> other benefits too. This way people who are written up as being great >> community members can refer to the GNOME Wiki as a testament of their >> work in addition to whatever recommendations they may get on social >> networking sites. >> >> > Also we should consider putting people who did good work on the release > notes on a GNOME release? I know that on subprojects this occurs but we > don't do it on a project level. I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm > wrong. > > sri > > > -- > marketing-list mailing list > marketing-list@gnome.org > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list > >
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