Thorsten Bro wrote:
Hi all,
Am 07.12.2017 um 12:16 schrieb Lars Vogdt:
The decision is not easy for me, as infrastructure administration is always my baby - and especially the openSUSE infrastructure was part of my life now for many, many years. But time goes by and - as well as people - things change. So I decided to step back in this area for now and give others a chance.
besides all the politics and changes happening in the last weeks, with none of this helping in actually improving the infrastructure, but making peoples life harder, I really have to say, that this is what happens when politics go crazy, people get sad and step out of the way
Hi Thorsten Yes, that is exactly what it sounds like.
- of course they try to fight for a valid amount of time - but if it is about a project mainly driven in free time - like here - I think we all understand, why you had to decided for yourself to make a decision.
Being a bit on the outside, I am too far removed to really know what's going on. That's okay, I'm curious, but I don't need to know. I just get a dire sense of things falling apart.
I'll get a list of at least 22 machines. So I suggest to sit down together - before the Heroes meeting in March - and discuss on which services are running there, how they are managed at the moment and who can be the new openSUSE Hero taking over this service.
That sounds like a sensible thing to do - I can't really take part (bit of a long drive), but I am happy to help with whatever I can.
Of course there is even more, especially for the openSUSE Heroes managed machines, I think it would be good to have a proper handover of these services.
It would be critical. I am sure Lars will endeavour to make himself available when needed, but a handover is absolutely critical. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (2.9°C) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org