On Sunday July 4 2010 00:55:03 Rajko M. wrote:
On Saturday 03 July 2010 12:37:11 Jan Engelhardt wrote: ...
But since you cannot quantify as to whether they do that, they should really be called Registered Member instead.
"Registered member" is OK for voting. Being contributor and real person, is enough for that.
"Core member" must show more in some of our activities, with quantity, quality and persistence. We can call it "Leading member", but that has connotation that we don't need. Lead is in workplace hierarchy here above workers, and has some commanding capability.
I'm totally against creating different levels of "members" since that just will open a bottomless can of worms why X is "only" a "member" while Y is a "super member" but X does more than Y, at least in the opinion of X or perhaps Z. Also it reminds me too much of that forum style by rating people based on their post count (which doesn't say anything most of the times). If you contribute in one way or the other and contribute enough you can apply for membership which gives you e.g. the right to vote. IMHO it really isn't necessary to make more fuss about it.
Language nitpick: "Distinguished Contributor".
Right :) (distinctive and distinguished are easy to be confused)
"Distinguished contributor" would be someone that has no continuous activity, but when is active we can see that.
Which just leads to having some definition for being a "Distinguished contributor" which needs to draw the border to being a "normal member" - as in it doesn't bring anything but just enlarges the problem. IMHO people contribute cause they like to do so. If they contributed enough they can apply for membership. And if they get declined now they can continue contributing and reapply later and then get admitted. I just don't see any problem with this and IMHO this whole discussion how to call it is somehow ridiculous and unnecessary - which is why I would like to suggest to rename "member" to "potato" and be done with it. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-project+help@opensuse.org