Hi Sebastian

We are dealing with a chicken and egg problem   Scalr wants more community 
contribution.  While I don’t disagree, I am trying to highlight the problem 
that even if we want to help many times we are unable to help.

I leave it to your team to decide how to proceed.  All I have known and seen is 
that every great open source company always “seeds” community engagement.  The 
larger the community the more the contribution.  I don’t know the exact 
numbers, I am sure you know the spread of Scalr community.  Please put in place 
any model that you think will work, all I want (and hope) is that Scalr gets 
stronger.

Cheers
Srini

From: Sebastian Stadil 
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2012 5:04 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: Bug ? ELB and replacing unhealthy servers

We have consensus on the problem: community users have questions, and some of 
those questions can only be answered by Scalr staff. 

Where I believe we differ is the way to address this problem. You seem to 
suggest that we should indiscriminately answer them. We propose to selectively 
answer them based on some criteria (person's contribution to the community, 
ability to have the question answered by the community, time involved in 
answering).

I don't believe that indiscriminately answering questions will create a 
self-sustaining community forum. I believe encouraging people to post will do 
so better, especially if there is an incentive. Thoughts?


On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 5:28 AM, Juan Granados <[email protected]> wrote:

  +2 Srini. You have helped me out alot. It would be nice to have more
  community support. Scalr is a great application.

  Juan


  On Apr 4, 7:54 am, mavinman <[email protected]> wrote:
  > +1 Srini.  Well written, fully agree.
  >
  > On Apr 4, 12:08 am, "Srinivasan Subramanian"
  >
  >
  >
  >
  >
  >
  >
  > <[email protected]> wrote:
  > > Hi Sebastian
  >
  > > In principle there are no disconnects with what you are proposing below.  
I am sure everyone appreciates the work your team is doing in providing this as 
Open Source and the need to put a business model around it.  Many successful 
companies have worked out this model and I am sure you will also be successful.
  >
  > > Having said that, here is my feedback.
  >
  > > 1. I think that the model wherein when someone contributes from the 
community, your team will support those issues a little more is not appealing.  
Its some how not democratic
  > > 2. What Scalr really needs is a rich, vibrant community.  Why do I say 
that?  Since the time I have been posting queries on the forum (last 3 or 4 
months), very few questions have been answered by the community.  Only some 
questions have been answered and many have gone unanswered.  Either I have 
found some answers myself or they are still pending.  The few which were 
answered, were answered by the Scalr team.
  > > 3  The traffic is also not very high.
  > > 4. Take my last query wherein I appealed to your team for an answer.  I 
don’t expect a solution but only an answer so I can find some solutions myself.
  > > 5. The fact that there are very few answers from the community points not 
(in my view) to apathy for the product but more to either:
  > >     a.  Fewer users using the product (or)
  > >     b.  Limited knowledge amongst the community to answer.
  > > 6.  IMHO I think it’s a bit of both, but more of the second reason.  
Scalr is not easy s/w to understand since its solving a complex problem.  The 
only way your team can focus more and more on product development and less on 
community support is by building up a vibrant community.  Many companies have a 
community manager and try to rally the community.
  > > 7.  The forums cannot survive only community contributions but also need 
internal Scalr help.  The help to be provided is answers more than fixes.  A 
good case in point is my query on whether there is an automated upgrade from 
2.5 to 3.0, the answer was No and I found a way around it (and posted the info 
back to the forum to help others ).  What was important was that I got a quick 
answer and hence proceeded with the next step.  The challenge is that many 
times there are no answers.
  >
  > > How can this change?  I would request that you scout for volunteers to 
support your effort on the forums.  I volunteer readily for this effort.  Once 
you have some volunteers, please provide us some further info than what is 
already available so that questions on the forums can be answered by the 
volunteers.  This will gradually allow your team to focus lesser on the unpaid 
support and focus more on product advancement.
  >
  > > Its better to spend some effort and time in building up a community.  The 
answers and solutions will then automatically come.
  >
  > > Cheers
  > > Srini
  >
  > > From: Sebastian Stadil
  > > Sent: Wednesday, April 04, 2012 4:24 AM
  > > To: [email protected]
  > > Subject: Re: Bug ? ELB and replacing unhealthy servers
  >
  > > Hey guys,
  >
  > > We've had an internal discussion on this, and I'd like to share our 
thoughts with you, so you understand where we come from.
  >
  > > In essence, our software is free, but our time isn't. I think we can all 
agree that it's in our best interest as users that we charge for our services 
and reinvest for a better product.
  >
  > > I understand that it's hard to justify getting a support contract for the 
occasional small issue that shouldn't take "more than 5 minutes to fix". But if 
we give out our software and support for free, what's left?
  >
  > > With this, I'd like to propose that this forum is here for the community 
to help itself, but that we avoid requests specifically made to the Scalr 
company or Scalr staff. We prefer a karma-based system where the more an 
individual answers others' questions, contributes to documentation, and adds 
value for others, and more likely we'll set time aside to investigate an issue, 
try to reproduce, or develop a fix for them.
  >
  > > If any of you know any community management software that would 
facilitate this, kind of like ohloh.net's kudos (http://meta.ohloh.net/kudos/), 
please let us know.
  >
  > > Thoughts?
  >
  > > On Tuesday, April 3, 2012 3:20:53 AM UTC-7, Srini wrote:
  >
  > >   Hi
  >
  > >   Is anyone in the community using ELB with Scalr?  Have you come across 
the problem i detailed?  Maybe i am the only one facing it since Scalr monitors 
port 80 but my app runs on 8080 and ELB is also monitoring it on 8080.
  >
  > >   Can some one from Scalr please confirm if this is supposed to work with 
my config or not?  I just need a confirmation .. based on the reply I will 
handle the refreshing of the instances somehow.
  >
  > >   Thanks
  > >   Srini
  >
  > >   On Tuesday, March 27, 2012 12:10:48 PM UTC+5:30, Srini wrote:
  > >     I use the ELB (instead of the nginx role) for load balancing.  When 
the instance is marked unhealthy on the ELB by AWS, Scalr is not detecting this 
and creating a new instance.  Instead ELB indicates its out of service and 
Scalr is just running the old instance.
  >
  > >     Is this a bug or some setup issue in my landscape?  If the unhealthy 
instance is not detected and a new instance recreated, ELB would turn out to be 
useless right?
  >
  > >     Cheers
  > >     Srini
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