-Original Message-
From: Benson Margulies [mailto:bimargul...@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, May 26, 2012 10:51 AM
To: general@incubator.apache.org
Subject: Re: JIRA and communities
So, what message here should the incubator send a podling, or the
foundation send a TLP? I really don't mean
On May 28, 2012, at 6:57 AM, Franklin, Matthew B. wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Benson Margulies [mailto:bimargul...@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, May 26, 2012 10:51 AM
To: general@incubator.apache.org
Subject: Re: JIRA and communities
So, what message here should the incubator
So, what message here should the incubator send a podling, or the
foundation send a TLP? I really don't mean this as a rhetorical
question at all, I'm honestly puzzled. In the case of Lucene, I've
been hanging out for months, and I feel perfectly confident that it's
a healthy community by any
On Sat, May 26, 2012 at 7:51 AM, Benson Margulies bimargul...@gmail.com wrote:
So, what message here should the incubator send a podling, or the
foundation send a TLP? I really don't mean this as a rhetorical
question at all, I'm honestly puzzled.
There are a couple of technical mitigations
Marvin,
I am at your disposal to collaborate on something here; note my reply
at infrastructure@. It seems to me that this thread would largely go
better over there, now that the caveat that 'a podling run entirely on
JIRA may have community problems' has been delivered.
--benson
below, you or others would find the JIRA business
digestible. Also, on the other hand, I fear that the co-employed
contributors are collaborating in the hallway, and the lack of the
context in JIRA or on the list is contributing to the problem.
I'm not convinced that JIRA helps communities. It's
to the problem.
I'm not convinced that JIRA helps communities. It's great in companies -IDE
integration, you can bounce issues to others, it pings your phone so often
you can use it as a network liveness test. It also lets you persist
discussions in a way that can be searched. In a busy project
On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 8:37 AM, Benson Margulies bimargul...@gmail.com wrote:
I don't claim that JIRA helps, but I also don't accept the proposition
that JIRA hurts.
I claim it does both.
I think that we should focus on the community, not the tools. The
JIRA-oriented projects I follow have
of the
context in JIRA or on the list is contributing to the problem.
I'm not convinced that JIRA helps communities. It's great in companies -IDE
integration, you can bounce issues to others, it pings your phone so often
you can use it as a network liveness test. It also lets you persist
discussions