Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Alexandro Colorado
On 8/24/14, Jörg Schmidt  wrote:
>> From: acolor...@gmail.com [mailto:acolor...@gmail.com] On
>
>> If you havent really read all the articles, the media is backpedalling
>> from what it was a greatly missconstrude headline news.
>
> I have read many articles, although certainly not read all.
>
> Above all, I know the situation in Munich very well, because I worked for 4
> years personally in the LIMUX-project.
> I know e.g. all application scenarios where Munich OpenOffice uses, so the
> concrete implemented macro solutions and technical applications based on
> Open Office.
> I also know the political context in Germany the background against which
> the development takes place in Munich.

I have very good ties with the people from The Linux Action Show
podcast[1], they were talking about this issue in Germany and would be
interested if you could be a guest for interview about the situation
and maybe help get more knowlege on what happened. If you are
available maybe there could work withing your schedule for a live
interview during their show.

I include chris (the host of the podcast) to figure out the details.


[1] http://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/show/linuxactionshow/

>
> Greetings,
> Jörg
>
>
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-- 
Alexandro Colorado
Apache OpenOffice Contributor
882C 4389 3C27 E8DF 41B9  5C4C 1DB7 9D1C 7F4C 2614

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Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Alexandro Colorado
A most wanted work is the tracking and documentation of success stories
Eric tenenbaum used to do this work on the wiki.  Please search for success
stories
On Aug 24, 2014 12:41 PM, "Andrea Pescetti"  wrote:

> Jörg Schmidt wrote:
>
>> I believed the situation in Munich would generally (and internationally)
>> known.
>>
>
> Not necessarily. For example, I casually read, on mainstream news, that
> Munich was going back to Windows (and amusingly I had read about Munich
> adopting LIMUX only from specialized sites). No further clarifications
> after it. So I am definitely one of the people who would benefit from a
> competent writeup.
>
>  I could even write something about it, because to me the situation
>> is well known. Would it be quite useful to do that? Perhaps as a blog
>> post in https://blogs.apache.org/OOo/?
>>
>
> Please do. If you don't have the rights to publish it, someone (including
> me) can surely publish it for you.
>
>  public relations work for AOO is equally important as good programming?
>> Then I agree with you.
>>
>
> And I agree with you both too. Fact is, we do have good programmers (even
> "more than good", for that matter), but we don't have people very active
> and competent in marketing. This is the marketing list and indeed the level
> of activity should be much higher than what I'm seeing now; but it all
> depends on individuals participating on this list.
>
> Regards,
>   Andrea.
>
> -
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>
>


Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Andrea Pescetti

Jörg Schmidt wrote:

I believed the situation in Munich would generally (and internationally) known.


Not necessarily. For example, I casually read, on mainstream news, that 
Munich was going back to Windows (and amusingly I had read about Munich 
adopting LIMUX only from specialized sites). No further clarifications 
after it. So I am definitely one of the people who would benefit from a 
competent writeup.



I could even write something about it, because to me the situation
is well known. Would it be quite useful to do that? Perhaps as a blog
post in https://blogs.apache.org/OOo/?


Please do. If you don't have the rights to publish it, someone 
(including me) can surely publish it for you.



public relations work for AOO is equally important as good programming? Then I 
agree with you.


And I agree with you both too. Fact is, we do have good programmers 
(even "more than good", for that matter), but we don't have people very 
active and competent in marketing. This is the marketing list and indeed 
the level of activity should be much higher than what I'm seeing now; 
but it all depends on individuals participating on this list.


Regards,
  Andrea.

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Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Jörg Schmidt
> From: acolor...@gmail.com [mailto:acolor...@gmail.com] On 

> If you havent really read all the articles, the media is backpedalling
> from what it was a greatly missconstrude headline news.

I have read many articles, although certainly not read all.

Above all, I know the situation in Munich very well, because I worked for 4 
years personally in the LIMUX-project. 
I know e.g. all application scenarios where Munich OpenOffice uses, so the 
concrete implemented macro solutions and technical applications based on Open 
Office.
I also know the political context in Germany the background against which the 
development takes place in Munich.


Greetings,
Jörg


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Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Alexandro Colorado
On 8/24/14, Jörg Schmidt  wrote:
>> From: acolor...@gmail.com [mailto:acolor...@gmail.com] On
>
>> Yes but the damage most time is NOT local. And that makes us act
>> globally and locally. There was a big misstransalation of the news
>> mainly because of sensationalist titles that affect the global
>> perception of Open source (not just OpenOffice).
>>
>> However we are target and we want to clear as much of the fog created
>> by sensationalism and also misstransaltions. Having germans write up
>> (in english) like you are doing right now allow us to have a clearer
>> image of the situation. Unfortunately we dont have much community
>> involvement by the IT people from the Munich council here, which could
>> help us to even clear even more the communication pipes.
>>
>> That said, AOO has the biggest voice, since we can launch a campaing
>> and will target enterprise costumers on what the real details and why
>> AOO has succeed in Munich despite the somewhat erroneous news.
>
> You mean that not at all members of the AOO community know what it is in
> Munich and we therefore need translations so the situation is
> understandable?
>
> If so, I have been misunderstood, because I believed the situation in Munich
> would generally (and internationally) known.
>
> In the event that it would matter the situation in Munich to make it clear I
> could even write something about it, because to me the situation is well
> known. Would it be quite useful to do that? Perhaps as a blog post in
> https://blogs.apache.org/OOo/?

If you havent really read all the articles, the media is backpedalling
from what it was a greatly missconstrude headline news.

This article introduce some corrections:
http://www.techrepublic.com/article/no-munich-isnt-about-to-ditch-free-software-and-move-back-to-windows/

Of course a week later after the news broke and like we all know, the
public end up with the first impressions.

>
> Greetings,
> Jörg
>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: marketing-unsubscr...@openoffice.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: marketing-h...@openoffice.apache.org
>
>


-- 
Alexandro Colorado
Apache OpenOffice Contributor
882C 4389 3C27 E8DF 41B9  5C4C 1DB7 9D1C 7F4C 2614

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Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Jörg Schmidt
> From: acolor...@gmail.com [mailto:acolor...@gmail.com] On 

> Yes but the damage most time is NOT local. And that makes us act
> globally and locally. There was a big misstransalation of the news
> mainly because of sensationalist titles that affect the global
> perception of Open source (not just OpenOffice).
> 
> However we are target and we want to clear as much of the fog created
> by sensationalism and also misstransaltions. Having germans write up
> (in english) like you are doing right now allow us to have a clearer
> image of the situation. Unfortunately we dont have much community
> involvement by the IT people from the Munich council here, which could
> help us to even clear even more the communication pipes.
> 
> That said, AOO has the biggest voice, since we can launch a campaing
> and will target enterprise costumers on what the real details and why
> AOO has succeed in Munich despite the somewhat erroneous news.

You mean that not at all members of the AOO community know what it is in Munich 
and we therefore need translations so the situation is understandable? 

If so, I have been misunderstood, because I believed the situation in Munich 
would generally (and internationally) known. 

In the event that it would matter the situation in Munich to make it clear I 
could even write something about it, because to me the situation is well known. 
Would it be quite useful to do that? Perhaps as a blog post in 
https://blogs.apache.org/OOo/?



Greetings,
Jörg


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Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Alexandro Colorado
On 8/24/14, Jörg Schmidt  wrote:
>> From: acolor...@gmail.com [mailto:acolor...@gmail.com] On
>
>> And that's part of the problem. We need AOO-german nationals to work
>> on transfering that communication into english (not only translate but
>> present it). Otherwise we are behind a language paywall (and yes I
>> know Gtranslate is good for german but still is more than translation)
>> is context.
>
> Yes, but there is also another way of viewing: local working is local and
> each of interested in it, must get involved locally.
> I know a lot about OpenOffice, but sorry, I'm not a translator and
> translations are hard work for me, and make me not fun.

Yes but the damage most time is NOT local. And that makes us act
globally and locally. There was a big misstransalation of the news
mainly because of sensationalist titles that affect the global
perception of Open source (not just OpenOffice).

However we are target and we want to clear as much of the fog created
by sensationalism and also misstransaltions. Having germans write up
(in english) like you are doing right now allow us to have a clearer
image of the situation. Unfortunately we dont have much community
involvement by the IT people from the Munich council here, which could
help us to even clear even more the communication pipes.

That said, AOO has the biggest voice, since we can launch a campaing
and will target enterprise costumers on what the real details and why
AOO has succeed in Munich despite the somewhat erroneous news.

>
> Please understand me correctly, I mean that it is a practical question weigh
> up how to get to the greatest possible success, is often the part of the
> international community be possible, but sometimes it's better to focus on
> local possibilities.
> It is for many of the employees at AOO interested, an important detail, the
> language in which they have to perform the communication. If they need to
> perform communication in English they will not participate, because they too
> difficult.
>
>> People at the TDF are very active in germany marketing team, yet in
>> AOO camp,  marketing hasn't been a priority which bring us back to
>> questioning what's the aim of AOO for pushing it's brand value into
>> organizations.
>>
>> Unfortunately Apache cares a lot about avoiding being un-represented
>> more than the succes of the project. I think is important to evaluate
>> the future of AOO beyond the scope of development.
>
> I read it several times, but am not safe what you mean.
>
> Do you mean good public relations work for AOO is equally important as good
> programming? Then I agree with you.
>
>
>
> Greetings,
> Jörg
>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: marketing-unsubscr...@openoffice.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: marketing-h...@openoffice.apache.org
>
>


-- 
Alexandro Colorado
Apache OpenOffice Contributor
882C 4389 3C27 E8DF 41B9  5C4C 1DB7 9D1C 7F4C 2614

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Re: What are we doing about Munich?

2014-08-24 Thread Jörg Schmidt
> From: acolor...@gmail.com [mailto:acolor...@gmail.com] On 

> And that's part of the problem. We need AOO-german nationals to work
> on transfering that communication into english (not only translate but
> present it). Otherwise we are behind a language paywall (and yes I
> know Gtranslate is good for german but still is more than translation)
> is context.

Yes, but there is also another way of viewing: local working is local and each 
of interested in it, must get involved locally. 
I know a lot about OpenOffice, but sorry, I'm not a translator and translations 
are hard work for me, and make me not fun. 

Please understand me correctly, I mean that it is a practical question weigh up 
how to get to the greatest possible success, is often the part of the 
international community be possible, but sometimes it's better to focus on 
local possibilities. 
It is for many of the employees at AOO interested, an important detail, the 
language in which they have to perform the communication. If they need to 
perform communication in English they will not participate, because they too 
difficult. 

> People at the TDF are very active in germany marketing team, yet in
> AOO camp,  marketing hasn't been a priority which bring us back to
> questioning what's the aim of AOO for pushing it's brand value into
> organizations.
> 
> Unfortunately Apache cares a lot about avoiding being un-represented
> more than the succes of the project. I think is important to evaluate
> the future of AOO beyond the scope of development.

I read it several times, but am not safe what you mean. 

Do you mean good public relations work for AOO is equally important as good 
programming? Then I agree with you.



Greetings,
Jörg


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