Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-30 Thread Oon-Ee Ng
On Mon, Oct 1, 2012 at 7:07 AM, Guus Snijders  wrote:
>
> There are sometimes quite interesting details mentioned in the OT threads.
> A -discuss list would be a good place for those, without cluttering
> -general.
> (yes, i'm being an optimist here ;-).
>
> Opening dev-public would take some serious manpower. I see a little
> advantage but quite an investment (manpower, not financial). Better leave
> it as-is.

This is Arch, after all. Someone could just start a
community-supported-and-maintained arch-unofficial-discuss list. Might
be a good way for those who want to contribute but don't have the
technical skills needed by devs/TUs to actually do something
Arch-related.

It would need to be clearly labelled as unofficial, and marketing that
list would be tough, but the benefits are:-
a) devs/TUs not distracted from their primary roles
b) community involvement
AND if it actually gains traction:-
c) a place would exist for non-technical discussion (above and beyond the IRC)

Of course, if such a list was unmoderated and became a flame fest most
would just unsubscribe, but if too heavily moderated noone would be
interested as well... good luck =)


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-30 Thread Guus Snijders
Op 30 sep. 2012 06:37 schreef "Nicholas MIller"  het
volgende:
>
> On Sep 29, 2012 10:26 PM, "Oon-Ee Ng"  wrote:
> >
> > On Sat, Sep 29, 2012 at 11:53 AM,  <1007...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > 
> > > ...sometimes I want to contact the
> > > devs to bring something up or ask a question on it.
> >
> > There's a bug tracker where you can directly contact maintainers, for
> > bugs/feature requests. For 'questions' I'd think that's not really the
> > responsibility of the maintainers/devs/TUs.
> >
> > Example:-
> > 1. Program A crashes when I do X
> > 2. Why is this configure flag not enabled for library B?
> > 3. The documentation-supplied config for application C doesn't run.
> > 4. How do I set up a server using D?
> > 5. Why was this decision made for application/library E?
> >
> > 1, 2, and 3 are suitable for the bug tracker (maybe more suitable for
> > upstream bug tracker though, in some cases). 4 should not be directed
> > at devs or TUs, ever. 5, depending on content, is a feature request or
> > a topic going nowhere (hence TGN in the forums).
> >
> > I do not support the opening of arch-dev-public (its supposed to be an
> > announcement list) nor the creation of any other channel for devs to
> > be contacted. Its the community's responsibility to keep arch-general
> > clean enough that devs/TUs don't quit it. arch-discussion etc. would
> > not help simply because in general the endless topics ARE initially
> > technical, and most of us have a fuzzy line between technical topics
> > and our personal opinions on them anyway.
>
> When i first say the suggestion of another list (discussion)i thought it
> might be a good idea however
>
> The line between technical and opinion usually seem the same at the start

+1 from me.

There are sometimes quite interesting details mentioned in the OT threads.
A -discuss list would be a good place for those, without cluttering
-general.
(yes, i'm being an optimist here ;-).

Opening dev-public would take some serious manpower. I see a little
advantage but quite an investment (manpower, not financial). Better leave
it as-is.

Mvg, Guus


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-29 Thread Nicholas MIller
On Sep 29, 2012 10:26 PM, "Oon-Ee Ng"  wrote:
>
> On Sat, Sep 29, 2012 at 11:53 AM,  <1007...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> > ...sometimes I want to contact the
> > devs to bring something up or ask a question on it.
>
> There's a bug tracker where you can directly contact maintainers, for
> bugs/feature requests. For 'questions' I'd think that's not really the
> responsibility of the maintainers/devs/TUs.
>
> Example:-
> 1. Program A crashes when I do X
> 2. Why is this configure flag not enabled for library B?
> 3. The documentation-supplied config for application C doesn't run.
> 4. How do I set up a server using D?
> 5. Why was this decision made for application/library E?
>
> 1, 2, and 3 are suitable for the bug tracker (maybe more suitable for
> upstream bug tracker though, in some cases). 4 should not be directed
> at devs or TUs, ever. 5, depending on content, is a feature request or
> a topic going nowhere (hence TGN in the forums).
>
> I do not support the opening of arch-dev-public (its supposed to be an
> announcement list) nor the creation of any other channel for devs to
> be contacted. Its the community's responsibility to keep arch-general
> clean enough that devs/TUs don't quit it. arch-discussion etc. would
> not help simply because in general the endless topics ARE initially
> technical, and most of us have a fuzzy line between technical topics
> and our personal opinions on them anyway.

When i first say the suggestion of another list (discussion)i thought it
might be a good idea however

The line between technical and opinion usually seem the same at the start


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-29 Thread Oon-Ee Ng
On Sat, Sep 29, 2012 at 11:53 AM,  <1007...@gmail.com> wrote:

> ...sometimes I want to contact the
> devs to bring something up or ask a question on it.

There's a bug tracker where you can directly contact maintainers, for
bugs/feature requests. For 'questions' I'd think that's not really the
responsibility of the maintainers/devs/TUs.

Example:-
1. Program A crashes when I do X
2. Why is this configure flag not enabled for library B?
3. The documentation-supplied config for application C doesn't run.
4. How do I set up a server using D?
5. Why was this decision made for application/library E?

1, 2, and 3 are suitable for the bug tracker (maybe more suitable for
upstream bug tracker though, in some cases). 4 should not be directed
at devs or TUs, ever. 5, depending on content, is a feature request or
a topic going nowhere (hence TGN in the forums).

I do not support the opening of arch-dev-public (its supposed to be an
announcement list) nor the creation of any other channel for devs to
be contacted. Its the community's responsibility to keep arch-general
clean enough that devs/TUs don't quit it. arch-discussion etc. would
not help simply because in general the endless topics ARE initially
technical, and most of us have a fuzzy line between technical topics
and our personal opinions on them anyway.


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread 1007380
On Sat, Sep 29, 2012 at 02:16:23AM +0800, Gaetan Bisson wrote:
> [2012-09-28 12:01:01 +0200] Nicolas Sebrecht:
> > The 28/09/12, Gaetan Bisson wrote:
> > 
> > > We have recently seen on this very mailing list that for every person
> > > posting considerate opinions, there are dozens who just pollute threads
> > > with fear, uncertainty, doubt, and just sheer incompetence.
> > 
> > I'm very confident that an open dev mailing list with topic-oriented
> > policy would just work. I'm so confident because this is how the Gentoo
> > dev mailing list works and it works well.
> 
> So, essentially, you have no arguments except that "it should just work
> like it does for Gentoo"; yet you've posted in this thread five times
> only to repeat the above. But, of course, if our topic of discussion
> were to be technical, your stubbornness (and the resulting noise) would
> magically go away, right?
> 
> -- 
> Gaetan

All,

I agree with Gaetan. Saying this will 'just work' is like saying that
magic exists. It's not going to 'just work,' as you say. I have followed
arch-dev-public for a few months now, and I appreciate the on topic
discussion that happens there, though sometimes I want to contact the
devs to bring something up or ask a question on it. I'd like to just
throw out a few ideas:

1) Create a screening process for people, applications they need to turn
in, etc. to be able to post on the dev list. Taking into account
that it could take up a lot of valuable dev time sorting through
these to get to the meat and potatoes, there could even be a sub
pannel of 'trusted mailing list users' (possibly made up of the
people accepted onto the mailing list that are not official
devs) that pre-screen to filter out obvious spam/trolls.

2) Allow poeple to email arch-dev-public, but only allow their mail to
go through if it is approved. I would rather see something like
number 1 put into effect, as it would reduce the time devs need
to spend going through mail, but it is still an option in my
mind.

3) Keep arch-dev-public the way it is, and let people use other means of
communication (a la IRC) and create a specific dev channel so
that users can contact even just one dev with input, and if that
dev sees fit, he can include it in the next mail to
arch-dev-public (basically just another way of screening things)

I would think that both 1 and 3 could be implemented and both parties
would be appeased.

Thank you,

KaiSforza


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Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread Gaetan Bisson
[2012-09-28 12:01:01 +0200] Nicolas Sebrecht:
> The 28/09/12, Gaetan Bisson wrote:
> 
> > We have recently seen on this very mailing list that for every person
> > posting considerate opinions, there are dozens who just pollute threads
> > with fear, uncertainty, doubt, and just sheer incompetence.
> 
> I'm very confident that an open dev mailing list with topic-oriented
> policy would just work. I'm so confident because this is how the Gentoo
> dev mailing list works and it works well.

So, essentially, you have no arguments except that "it should just work
like it does for Gentoo"; yet you've posted in this thread five times
only to repeat the above. But, of course, if our topic of discussion
were to be technical, your stubbornness (and the resulting noise) would
magically go away, right?

-- 
Gaetan


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread Leonidas Spyropoulos
On 28 Sep 2012 11:34, "Tom Gundersen"  wrote:
>
> An option could be to enable moderation on dev-public, still defaulting to
> rejecting everything, but allow through high-quality contributions from
the
> outside.
>
I concur this idea, but who's is going to moderate it? You should consider
that also if someone from the devs moderate it (more work for them).

> I agree that we should create a venue for would-be contributors to engage
> with us, but i also agree that we don't want to end up with non
> constructive content in dev-public, and we don't want to waste time on
> justifying rejecting/banning things (it should stay high-quality and low
> volume as we expect all devs and all users of testing to read it
> thoroughly).
>
+1 for a "bridge" to the dev-land.

> I don't know the best solution, just throwing out an idea.
>
> Tom


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread mike cloaked
On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 11:33 AM, Tom Gundersen  wrote:
> On Sep 28, 2012 12:01 PM, "Nicolas Sebrecht"  wrote:
>>
>> The 28/09/12, Gaetan Bisson wrote:
>>
>> > We have recently seen on this very mailing list that for every person
>> > posting considerate opinions, there are dozens who just pollute threads
>> > with fear, uncertainty, doubt, and just sheer incompetence.
>>
>> I'm very confident that an open dev mailing list with topic-oriented
>> policy would just work. I'm so confident because this is how the Gentoo
>> dev mailing list works and it works well.
>
> An option could be to enable moderation on dev-public, still defaulting to
> rejecting everything, but allow through high-quality contributions from the
> outside.
>
> I agree that we should create a venue for would-be contributors to engage
> with us, but i also agree that we don't want to end up with non
> constructive content in dev-public, and we don't want to waste time on
> justifying rejecting/banning things (it should stay high-quality and low
> volume as we expect all devs and all users of testing to read it
> thoroughly).
>
> I don't know the best solution, just throwing out an idea.
>
> Tom

It "might" work - but some lucky person would have to go through the
rejected stuff and filter out the worthwhile posts to allow through -
if I was a dev/moderator I might not want to undertake that task!  At
least at the moment the read only dev list is not polluted with "c**p"
as Allan might say!

I am sure there must be a significant number of people who are simply
not interested in seeing the "flame wars"/"troll posts" at all - so
not having them in the list to start with for me at least is the
better option - i.e. the status quo.  On the other hand is it possible
to "apply" for write permission to the dev list for non-devs?  Though
I would not like to be the person making those decisions either!

If anyone has been subscribed to the Fedora General list in the past
year or so, then you will have seen equally long running and equally
non-productive troll threads there - (one reason I unsubscribed from
that list some time ago).

I do like clean clear concise and logical technical discussion which I
expect is the view of many others too!

-- 
mike c


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread Tom Gundersen
On Sep 28, 2012 12:01 PM, "Nicolas Sebrecht"  wrote:
>
> The 28/09/12, Gaetan Bisson wrote:
>
> > We have recently seen on this very mailing list that for every person
> > posting considerate opinions, there are dozens who just pollute threads
> > with fear, uncertainty, doubt, and just sheer incompetence.
>
> I'm very confident that an open dev mailing list with topic-oriented
> policy would just work. I'm so confident because this is how the Gentoo
> dev mailing list works and it works well.

An option could be to enable moderation on dev-public, still defaulting to
rejecting everything, but allow through high-quality contributions from the
outside.

I agree that we should create a venue for would-be contributors to engage
with us, but i also agree that we don't want to end up with non
constructive content in dev-public, and we don't want to waste time on
justifying rejecting/banning things (it should stay high-quality and low
volume as we expect all devs and all users of testing to read it
thoroughly).

I don't know the best solution, just throwing out an idea.

Tom


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread Gaetan Bisson
[2012-09-28 11:38:13 +0200] Nicolas Sebrecht:
> What you're calling crap are all technical content that could gain with
> direct emulation with official maintainers.

We have recently seen on this very mailing list that for every person
posting considerate opinions, there are dozens who just pollute threads
with fear, uncertainty, doubt, and just sheer incompetence.

We simply cannot allow that to spread to arch-dev-public, even if we all
agree it is too bad that some people with considerate opinions are not
allowed to post there just because they aren't devs.

-- 
Gaetan


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread Allan McRae
On 28/09/12 19:38, Nicolas Sebrecht wrote:
> BTW, what a wonderfull attitude from you to non official people. Highly
> contructive and motivating. Thanks.

Thanks.



Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-28 Thread Allan McRae
On 28/09/12 19:01, Nicolas Sebrecht wrote:
> The 27/09/12, Karol Blazewicz wrote:
> 
>> Can you give some examples of discussions you would see moving to 
>> archlinux-dev?
> 
> Sure.
> 
>   Subject: [arch-general] Modifying archiso
>   From: Robbie Smith 
>   Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2012 19:47:11 +1000
>   To: arch-general@archlinux.org
>   Message-ID: <5058431f.5090...@gmail.com>
>   
>   Subject: [arch-general] Open Build Service adds support for Arch Linux
>   From: André Prata 
>   Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2012 11:48:36 +0100
>   To: arch-general@archlinux.org
>   
>   Subject: [arch-general] swt - why depends bump to java-runtime>=7?
>   From: "David C. Rankin" 
>   Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2012 16:06:46 -0500
>   To: Archlinux 
>   Message-ID: <504e5666.3000...@suddenlinkmail.com>
>   
>   Subject: [arch-general] archiso - more install guides
>   From: vadim kochan 
>   Date: Sat, 8 Sep 2012 22:33:39 +0300
>   To: arch-general@archlinux.org
>   
>   Subject: [arch-general] Requesting ownership of the bugs for AIF in the 
> bugtracker
>   From: Jeremiah Dodds 
>   Date: Mon, 03 Sep 2012 05:21:24 -0400
>   To: Arch General List 
>   Message-ID: 
> <87ehmjxy0b.fsf@friendface.i-did-not-set--mail-host-address--so-tickle-me>
>   
>   Subject: [arch-dev-public] Re: [RFC] another base cleanup
>   From: Nicolas Sebrecht 
>   Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2012 09:27:58 +0200
>   To: Public mailing list for Arch Linux development 
> 
>   Message-ID: <20120607072758.GB2427@nicolas-desktop>
> 
> These are only samples. I can't take the samples of topic not even
> written

If all that crap went to arch-dev-public, I would have to unsubscribe
there too.

Allan



Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread David Benfell

On 09/27/2012 11:34 AM, Tobias Frilling wrote:
The -discussion mailing list could serve as an outlet for this need, 
rendering the other list more productive via being moderated; The rule 
wouldn't be "shut up or be banned", which shouldn't really be 
necessary for rational folks like us, but "shut up or take this to 
-discussion" with banning as ultima ratio.
Forgive me as I'm writing from very dim memory of mailman; does mailman 
not offer the ability to suppress threads? And assuming it does, how 
well does it work?


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread nailz
Very eloquently put brethren "+1"
On Sep 27, 2012 9:33 PM, "Martín Cigorraga"  wrote:

> While I would like to support @Tobias idea of splitting the list I also
> agree with all the following emails.
> Btw, so much time using Arch and I've never heard about
> http://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux, thanks for that.
>
> I only want to add an observation to what was already said:
> Tipically all this flame seems to arise at the gates of new'n profound
> changes and as such it's perfectly understandable that these kind of things
> happens.
> We Arch Linux users are a kind of users who:
> 1. loves to know. While we are glad to solve a specific issue that's
> graying our hair, we will *not* be satisfied until we understand what the
> hell was happening and all the inner workings of that - that's a fact.
> 2. we don't like to let anybody hold our hand (well, I would let Eva Mendes
> hold mine... ) and as such we tend to be a bit grumpy about those users who
> come for help without actually _thinking_ about what can be the problem or
> at least without searching the forums, the wiki and the intertubes. On the
> other hand we are totally open to those folks that come with a problem
> explaining what's happenig, what they did and the results (in part because
> we enjoy solving these puzzles).
> 3. we are mostly self taught, autodidacts. As such we each develop an
> almost _unique_ way to interact with our systems and as such are our
> viewpoints about general GNU/Linux and F/LOSS and everything's else in
> life: yeah, we are free thinkers.
> 4. as a result of above we usually tailor our systems to our own personal
> taste and way to use it.
> 5. as a result of above we usually have a *strong* opinion about things,
> specially that things that may/will change the way we use our system - and
> here is when flames arise.
> 6. in the end we all love Arch with it's drawbacks -thankfully not many-
> and all it awesomeness, and deeply we know that while there are some
> aspects that aren't exactly the way we expect or at least how we would like
> them to be, the reality is that when we see how other distros works, when
> we have to deal with other distros because work, support to friends, our
> LUGs or anything else, we don't like them: while there may be some puntual
> things that may appeal to us the overall system _don't_! So Arch Linux's
> the way, what else? (At least this is how I feel regarding the rest of
> GNU/Linux distros since I first meet Arch a few years ago.)
>
> As a result of above I forsee more flaming in the future whenever a
> critical update or shift (like systemd is) come, that's shitty but's a
> natural reaction and thus we need to remain patient to passionate arguments
> and stubborn people - which in no way means to sacrifice our opinions.
> Regarding the flow of new users it's likely they *must* learn our house
> rules rather to we accomodate to them. I consider the forums, the wiki,
> this list and Arch Linux in general as my house in what F/LOSS regards and
> I don't like to see it vandalized - and wont allow that.
> A bit of trolling is funny as well too much politeness is insufferable and
> I can accomodate a low-hit if a say or ask for something stupid -and I will
> be the first to make laugh of myself for that- but newcomers should to be
> _clearly_ aware that we don't like nor support bad attitude and that we can
> hold their hands only to help them start: in this regard I can say Arch
> Linux is one of the most both friendly and connoisseur communities abroad
> GNU/Linux-land and I'm most grateful for it for help me start using this
> great distro when I first switched from *buntu-land.
>
> I'm but sure that now the systemd adoption is a fact we will have peaceful
> times ahead with the usual chit-chat and the new technologie seek-for-aid
> mails so I vote to give us -this list- some time before commit any change
> like splitting or anything else.
> Also I would like to encourage any dev, TU or skillful users that might
> have unsubscribed in the recent time to subscribe again an help push
> arch-general to it's greatest potential.
>
> Greetings!
>


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Fons Adriaensen
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 05:32:08PM -0300, Martín Cigorraga wrote:

> We Arch Linux users are a kind of users who:
> [1 ... 6]

A as user I can subscribe to this 100%, also to your conclusions.


-- 
FA

A world of exhaustive, reliable metadata would be an utopia.
It's also a pipe-dream, founded on self-delusion, nerd hubris
and hysterically inflated market opportunities. (Cory Doctorow)



Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Martín Cigorraga
While I would like to support @Tobias idea of splitting the list I also
agree with all the following emails.
Btw, so much time using Arch and I've never heard about
http://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux, thanks for that.

I only want to add an observation to what was already said:
Tipically all this flame seems to arise at the gates of new'n profound
changes and as such it's perfectly understandable that these kind of things
happens.
We Arch Linux users are a kind of users who:
1. loves to know. While we are glad to solve a specific issue that's
graying our hair, we will *not* be satisfied until we understand what the
hell was happening and all the inner workings of that - that's a fact.
2. we don't like to let anybody hold our hand (well, I would let Eva Mendes
hold mine... ) and as such we tend to be a bit grumpy about those users who
come for help without actually _thinking_ about what can be the problem or
at least without searching the forums, the wiki and the intertubes. On the
other hand we are totally open to those folks that come with a problem
explaining what's happenig, what they did and the results (in part because
we enjoy solving these puzzles).
3. we are mostly self taught, autodidacts. As such we each develop an
almost _unique_ way to interact with our systems and as such are our
viewpoints about general GNU/Linux and F/LOSS and everything's else in
life: yeah, we are free thinkers.
4. as a result of above we usually tailor our systems to our own personal
taste and way to use it.
5. as a result of above we usually have a *strong* opinion about things,
specially that things that may/will change the way we use our system - and
here is when flames arise.
6. in the end we all love Arch with it's drawbacks -thankfully not many-
and all it awesomeness, and deeply we know that while there are some
aspects that aren't exactly the way we expect or at least how we would like
them to be, the reality is that when we see how other distros works, when
we have to deal with other distros because work, support to friends, our
LUGs or anything else, we don't like them: while there may be some puntual
things that may appeal to us the overall system _don't_! So Arch Linux's
the way, what else? (At least this is how I feel regarding the rest of
GNU/Linux distros since I first meet Arch a few years ago.)

As a result of above I forsee more flaming in the future whenever a
critical update or shift (like systemd is) come, that's shitty but's a
natural reaction and thus we need to remain patient to passionate arguments
and stubborn people - which in no way means to sacrifice our opinions.
Regarding the flow of new users it's likely they *must* learn our house
rules rather to we accomodate to them. I consider the forums, the wiki,
this list and Arch Linux in general as my house in what F/LOSS regards and
I don't like to see it vandalized - and wont allow that.
A bit of trolling is funny as well too much politeness is insufferable and
I can accomodate a low-hit if a say or ask for something stupid -and I will
be the first to make laugh of myself for that- but newcomers should to be
_clearly_ aware that we don't like nor support bad attitude and that we can
hold their hands only to help them start: in this regard I can say Arch
Linux is one of the most both friendly and connoisseur communities abroad
GNU/Linux-land and I'm most grateful for it for help me start using this
great distro when I first switched from *buntu-land.

I'm but sure that now the systemd adoption is a fact we will have peaceful
times ahead with the usual chit-chat and the new technologie seek-for-aid
mails so I vote to give us -this list- some time before commit any change
like splitting or anything else.
Also I would like to encourage any dev, TU or skillful users that might
have unsubscribed in the recent time to subscribe again an help push
arch-general to it's greatest potential.

Greetings!


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Karol Blazewicz
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 7:47 PM, Joakim Hernberg  wrote:
> On Thu, 27 Sep 2012 17:28:02 +0100
> mike cloaked  wrote:
>
>> For those users who use the arch forums via a web interface there
>
> Is there an alternative way to access the forums?  mailing list, usenet?

You can subscribe to threads and subforums and receive updates to your
e-mail. There are rss feeds too.
Mike probably wanted to say you don't have to pay attention to e.g.
the 'Newbie corner' threads if you don't want to, where there are
relatively few Arch mailing lists.

As others have said:
- arch-general was enough when Arch was smaller and more niche, it's
one of the Major Distributions now :-) Maybe we need more MLs, maybe
we need more bans.
- There should be a way to 'mute' the thread via some option / filter
in your e-mail app to keep what you consider noise down.


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Tobias Frilling
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 09/27/2012 09:44 PM, Øyvind Heggstad wrote:
> I can only see two things that can really help slow down/stop/revert the
> spiral: 
>
> 1) Moderation. Get rid of the serial trollers/flamers
> 2) Get more devs and "good" people to join and be active.

For your last point: Thats putting the horse behind the cart. Most devs and/or
skilled users leave -general just because it has become such a dump.

Concerning moderation: See my last mail. Some users will always going head first
into heated discussions. The -discussion mailing list could serve as an outlet
for this need, rendering the other list more productive via being moderated; The
rule wouldn't be "shut up or be banned", which shouldn't really be necessary
for rational folks like us, but "shut up or take this to -discussion" with
banning as ultima ratio.
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Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Joakim Hernberg
On Thu, 27 Sep 2012 17:28:02 +0100
mike cloaked  wrote:

> For those users who use the arch forums via a web interface there

Is there an alternative way to access the forums?  mailing list, usenet?

-- 

   Joakim


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Øyvind Heggstad
On Thu, 27 Sep 2012 14:19:31 +0200
Tobias Frilling  wrote:

> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
> 
> On 09/27/2012 12:43 PM, Allan McRae wrote:
> > And we are back...
> 
> Sir, you've got some yarbles.
> IMHO the cause of all these flaming is that arch-general is too,
> well, general. What about if we would split this list up into a list
> for technical questions (e.g. arch-support) and a more philosophical,
> rambling one (e.g. arch-discussion), so that everyone could choose
> his/her own poison?
> 
> P.S.: This is definitely a help request to make the make the arch
> mailing lists a happy place again ;-)
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Imo it's not a problem that arch-general has a wide topic. You have to
remember that it actually worked well for years, it's really only in the
last 6-12 months or so that arch-general have really started to go
downhill.

Here is how it goes (in my eyes)

1) community is small, S/N ratio is awesome, discussions are generally
"friendly"

2) community starts growing fast, and brings with it a lower S/N ratio

3) more flame-wars etc starts to happen, causing some of the "good"
people to leave. S/N ratio gets even worse.

4) almost none of the devs nor old-timers and the more
friendly/knowledgeable
people are left. S/N goes to hell, bad press happens because of it,
just increasing the downward spiral.


I can only see two things that can really help slow down/stop/revert the
spiral: 

1) Moderation. Get rid of the serial trollers/flamers
2) Get more devs and "good" people to join and be active.

Where the second point probably is the most important. 


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread mike cloaked
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 5:37 PM, Karol Blazewicz
 wrote:

>
> As it was mentioned a couple times on the list, the forums have
> moderators. If you don't behave, you get banned, threads get closed
> etc.

OK - it seems to work - when I get frustrated with the mailling list I
go to the forums instead.  However it is also easy to just delete the
long dreary threads with zero useful information simply by a click of
a button!

-- 
mike c


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Karol Blazewicz
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 6:28 PM, mike cloaked  wrote:
> For those users who use the arch forums via a web interface there
> seems to be more helpful comments and less trolling than in the
> general list - just an observation - maybe that is because the forums
> are split into a number of topic specific separate forums - eg
> installation, kernel, server/networking newbie etc.
>
> --
> mike c

As it was mentioned a couple times on the list, the forums have
moderators. If you don't behave, you get banned, threads get closed
etc.


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread mike cloaked
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 3:35 PM, Nicolas Sebrecht  wrote:
> The 27/09/12, Tobias Frilling wrote:
>
>> IMHO the cause of all these flaming is that arch-general is too, well, 
>> general.
>
> The problem is not that arch-general is the wrong place for the latter
> threads. Users are correct to think such discussion should happen here.
>
> The problem is that maintainers, developers and advanced users want
> quality and constructive discussions. But this kind of contribution
> should happen on the archlinux-dev mailing list which is currently not
> possible because it's _closed_. The problem is that the dev list should
> be *open* to subscriptions. Trolling naturally does not happen in such
> list -- or die very fast -- because of the direct relationship of the
> discussions with the code and the maintenance jobs.
>
> Instead of fragmenting more the mailing lists with the hope of putting
> poor contributions out of place for advanced users, let enter the
> technical oriented users into the dev mailing list. Also, this would not
> let maintainers break from the constructive users with massive
> unsubscriptions from here.
>
> BTW, I find it's a shame that advanced users with technical and valid
> messages have to *fork* a thread from the dev list to the general list
> (or post a new request to the general list) with the *hope* that a
> maintainer/developer catch the reply in the other public mailing list.
> And no, I don't find requesting in private is a solution, either.
>
> The problem is not at the general mailing list but at the dev mailing
> list side.
>

For those users who use the arch forums via a web interface there
seems to be more helpful comments and less trolling than in the
general list - just an observation - maybe that is because the forums
are split into a number of topic specific separate forums - eg
installation, kernel, server/networking newbie etc.

-- 
mike c


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Tobias Frilling
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 09/27/2012 04:35 PM, Nicolas Sebrecht wrote:
> Instead of fragmenting more the mailing lists with the hope of putting
> poor contributions out of place for advanced users, let enter the
> technical oriented users into the dev mailing list.
I don't think that opening arch-dev-public for everybody would solve our
problems, it would just relocate the noise into this list. The devs and TUs
really need a quiet list of their own with a good signal/noise ratio. (There is
no arch-dev-secret, is there?)
So what if there was a arch-technical list instead of a arch-support, where all
the help request could land and also *purely* technical contributions from
advanced users? dev-public could stay as-is with reports and other official
stuff, technical would be the list for support and contribution and discussion
for rambling and flaming :-)
The thing is, some users really want this kind of heated debate, and the only
alternative we currently have is banning, which some consider censorship, or
shutting the list down for a day (still, awesome!). With the new split there
would be the alternative "guys, stay on topic or take is to -discussion".
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Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Karol Blazewicz
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 4:35 PM, Nicolas Sebrecht  wrote:
> The 27/09/12, Tobias Frilling wrote:
>
> The problem is not at the general mailing list but at the dev mailing
> list side.

archlinux-dev is for contributors and as long somebody is just a user
he should have read-only access. Unless we have a way (and a will) of
banning people from that list, there is nothing we can do to prevent
flames there, if we open it up.

The discussion on archlinux-dev is often based on RFCs made by some
dev and you can comment on it on arch-general just fine.

Can you give some examples of discussions you would see moving to archlinux-dev?


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Jakob Herrmann
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Full ack, although I have the feeling that critical discussion is
something what (at least some) devs/admins want to avoid within the
community.
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Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Karol Blazewicz
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 2:19 PM, Tobias Frilling
 wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On 09/27/2012 12:43 PM, Allan McRae wrote:
>> And we are back...
>
> Sir, you've got some yarbles.
> IMHO the cause of all these flaming is that arch-general is too, well, 
> general.
> What about if we would split this list up into a list for technical questions
> (e.g. arch-support) and a more philosophical, rambling one (e.g.
> arch-discussion), so that everyone could choose his/her own poison?

There already is a place for such discussion: http://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux


Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Tobias Frilling
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 09/27/2012 12:43 PM, Allan McRae wrote:
> And we are back...

Sir, you've got some yarbles.
IMHO the cause of all these flaming is that arch-general is too, well, general.
What about if we would split this list up into a list for technical questions
(e.g. arch-support) and a more philosophical, rambling one (e.g.
arch-discussion), so that everyone could choose his/her own poison?

P.S.: This is definitely a help request to make the make the arch mailing lists
a happy place again ;-)
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Re: [arch-general] Mailing list closed for 24 hours

2012-09-27 Thread Allan McRae
On 26/09/12 21:35, Allan McRae wrote:
> I am invoking the easy way to end flamewars...
> 
> This mailing list will be shut down for the next 24 hours.  Any messages
> sent to the list will go to /dev/null.
> 
> Once the list is reinstated, I will automatically ban any person who
> sends an email that is not asking for help or providing help.
> 

And we are back...

Remember sticking to help requests and answering these will ensure this
list remains open for everyone.

Allan