Hi *, On Wed, Dec 15, 2010 at 6:55 AM, Michael Wheatland <mich...@wheatland.com.au> wrote: > On Wed, Dec 15, 2010 at 2:40 PM, Sophie Gautier > <gautier.sop...@gmail.com> wrote: > [...] > We will never force anyone to do anything. In my mind, once the Drupal > development is complete and implemented then people will want to move > tools.
Then they can make their decision on a basis where Drupal is functional. Whether they then like it or not cannot be anticipated yet. > As I understand it, this is why the SC asked the website team to develop > Drupal. No SC never asked the website team to devlop Drupal. There were many Drupal fans/supporters that strongly voiced their opinion to choose drupal as CMS. But they just couldn't manage to setup a demo that met the basic requirements. That is why SC did choose Silverstripe, with the option to reconsider moving to Drupal early spring next year. By then, the drupal site should shine, the drupal supporters will be happy with it and they are sure it will convince people to switch. But in the end it depends on the user-interface of the drupal site whether the people who work with it will ask for the switch or "beg" the SC to stick with silverstripe. I didn't look at the current state of affairs wrt drupal, and probably will not have time for evaluation this year anyway, so I cannot give feedback yet. > [...] > It should be made clear to those contributing where the project is > going, this ensures that the work and project are aligned. Second > guessing SC decisions is not good for community morale and discourages > contribution. Sophie is part of the SC, so it can hardly be "second guessing" the decisions. And she also explained herself pretty clearly: She (as part of the SC) will not tell people to use <whatever> if the people won't like it. So I don't understand the fuzz about it. Again I state: What I saw of drupal in October did put me off, I'd never want to use drupal in a state like this. That's where SC decision comes in: It gives drupal folks a very, very fair chance to present themselves, gives them enough time to work without pressure/need to hurry on a cool site that will convince users not becuase it is "drupal", the great tool that can do everything when you configure it properly, but because it actually *does* that stuff. > IMHO, The Drupal website development has been a great example of the > community creating the tool they want. "they" in this case is mainly drupal-supporters, not the whole community, and especially not the people who will maintain the content. Those people will only get a chance to make their decision when the drupal-team announces their page as "we think everything is ready, go check it out and provide feedback" And yes, you got input from various groups that in part already use drupal for their work and stuff, but still this is hardly "the community". ciao Christian -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to website+h...@libreoffice.org List archive: http://www.libreoffice.org/lists/website/ *** All posts to this list are publicly archived for eternity ***