Garrett D'Amore wrote:
> I wonder what value opensolaris-discuss has?  

Back when we were a pilot program three years ago, it was our main 
discussion list. We had about 300 people on the list pre-launch, but 
only a small handful were actually talking. People complained back then, 
too, by the way. Then, within the pilot, we got up to about 10 lists for 
specific technologies, and then we opened and now we are over 200 lists.

opensolaris-discuss has always been this way. Nothing has changed. It's 
just gotten bigger, that's all. It's the one place /anyone/ can go, and, 
yes, it's messy. We can't have such a wide range of discussions on 
project-specific lists or even on community-specific lists. I agree that 
we should do a better job of persuading people to move conversations to 
specific lists, but many conversations belong right on opensolaris-discuss.


> I've never bothered to 
> read it, except occasionally when searching for a specific post that was 
> not cross posted.  


This is another practice we can do a better job managing: cross-posting.


> I've always assumed that the signal/noise ratio there 
> was so high as to make it untenable as a useful resource.
> 
> I remember long ago, when Linux finally gave up the mailing lists and 
> moved to USENIX.  I'm not sure everyone around here remembers what 
> USENIX is anymore (its been ages since I've bothered with it), but maybe 
> comp.os.opensolaris (or a hierarchy) needs to be created.
> The other question is, if no real productive conversations are happening 
> there, then what is the point of having it at all?  I imagine that some 
> folks are looking for support with their problems, but perhaps a 
> -support list would be better suited to _that_ need?
> 
>     -- Garrett
> 
> Christopher Frost wrote:
> 
>> It's been brought to my attention both from others within the community,
>> as well as those who are outside our community, and of course myself,
>> that a few changes should be made. 


Just a few?


>> These changes reflect the
>> opensolaris-discuss mailing list, and it's position within our
>> community.
>
>> 1) The opensolaris-discuss should have a warning label placed on it,
>> regarding to the ill-natured conversations which very frequently occur
>> there. Something to the nature of "The text within this list will very
>> possibly waste your time, and what you will read here is by no means a
>> reflection of our community, or the members here." In red, if I may add.
>> Some effort should be given to push users to proper lists to ask their
>> questions, or get an introduction of what they are getting into. Perhaps
>> even use a feature of jive to introduce a minimal post count before
>> entering this list, perhaps have it not visible from pipermail as well.


If you don't find value in it, you should unsubscribe and find a more 
appropriate list that is specific to your needs. I don't support the 
warning label idea, and I don't agree that the conversations are 
"ill-natured" either. I'm on many /internal/ Sun lists that are 
absolutely no different from opensolaris-discuss. General, free-for-all 
lists have that characteristic. That's why we have project lists and 
community lists and user group lists.


>> -This list is usually one of the lists MOST frequently approached by our
>> newcomers, and 9 times out of 10 lays on a very bad impression of our
>> community and it's members.


I'm not sure you can substantiate those numbers, but I get the point and 
largely agree with it. We as a community need to be more open and a less 
judgmental, no question about it. But I think very, very few would 
agree. Or let me say it another way: very few would agree enough to 
change. But opensolaris-discuss is not the only list that turns people 
off. There have been hot conversations in many lists. Including this one.


>> -I had dinner with some software developers last Friday, and this is
>> exactly what had happened to them, this had to have been the 4th or 5th
>> time I've heard the exact same thing from potential developers. Is this
>> the kind of welcoming we are trying to give?
>>
>> 2) To further stress the importance of limiting this list, I think it
>> should be scripted into the mailing-list that if opensolaris-discuss
>> exists, no other forum can be addressed. To keep the filth from seeping
>> out over the borders.


So, you are saying that we should limit the cross-posting? I agree.


>> 3) The community opensolaris-discuss may not, and should not be involved
>> in any community related processes, 


It shouldn't necessarily have influence, but I'd argue strongly against 
limited someone's ability to speak. What's the harm of someone 
expressing their opinion on opensolaris-discuss? We are taking this all 
way too seriously. opensolaris-discuss need not have much influence in 
decisions, but it could be a valuable part of the community's promise of 
openness.

Now that we have formal governance, Community Groups are empowered to 
create their own leaders and this is an excellent development. Many 
people are missing this really critical point. Community Groups can be 
powerful entities. Also, as Community Groups evolve, I think the 
attention on opensolaris-discuss will diminish greatly. And the fact 
that we have a Contributors and Core Contributors list decreases the 
influence of opensolaris-discuss even further. We are not necessarily 
using some of these mechanisms effectively but they are in place. So, in 
other words, perhaps the next time a GPL flame war spins up, we let it 
burn out. But if a serious licensing proposal (or whatever) is put on 
the table than it's discussed among the Contributors and Core 
Contributors on their list and then at some point that discussion is 
joined by the OGB. That's a very small group of people. Members, basically.


>>to push the issue even further that
>> we do not want constructive processes being squeezed in with the other
>> topics. I've seen it time and time again, "opensolaris-discuss really
>> isn't the place for constructive conversation", and it's true.


No one ever said that opensolaris-discuss is a place to get work done. 
You join a community or project or user group for that.


>> opensolaris-discuss is not a community group, it shouldn't be able to
>> sponsor projects, and none should be proposed within it. Announcements
>> should not be made within opensolaris-discuss, and community support
>> should NOT be sought within it either.


We can certainly do a better job of encouraging people do make their 
announcements on opensolaris-announce. More people have to sign up, 
tough. Announce only has about 600 or so people on it. Sign up:
http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/opensolaris-announce



>>
>> If these three concerns are dealt with, there may be a chance for our
>> community after all. 


There's more than just a chance for us. We are doing great. These are 
just growing pains. And, actually, they are /good/ problems to have. 
Remember ... we were supposed to have died /years/ ago.


>> But, until something is done about the spread of
>> negative energy, and the unwelcoming .. welcome our visitors and


The only way to address this is to add positive energy.


>> potential developers are getting, we will be just be tying our
>> shoe-laces together.
>>
>> Thank You,
>> Christopher Frost


Jim
-- 
Jim Grisanzio http://blogs.sun.com/jimgris
--


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