Στις 03/01/2011 10:11 πμ, ο/η Helen έγραψε:
I understand where you are coming from Kostas, and share similar concerns about Facebook, but I use it because my family, friends and colleagues do - just as many current and potential users and contributors do.
We certainly need to take a look at Diaspora (though I have heard some concerns regarding its user agreement) but I don't think we should just walk away from Facebook. There's no need to "throw the baby out with the bathwater" as the expression goes.
I don't think we want to invest a -lot- of time on our facebook presence, but people do use it as a means of keeping in touch and regular page updates are seen by many who might not visit other pages.
Most content and effort should go into the Wiki and openSUSE News as well as the personal blogs that make up the broader 'Planet' (if I understand that correctly) and use social networking to push users back to that content where possible. (People don't like 100% automated updates, personal touch is needed, but we can still work to promote our own domains.)
I think Facebook will eventually be superceded by another social networking model of some kind.
Helen
Well, you are right. I personally solved this problem, keeping in two phases. Consider that as a suggestion, than as an argument. 1st: I deleted people who I knew from school, university, every-day life, people that in real life we didn't have any special relation or we have everyday relation so its difficult to lost tracks and kept the 80 I appreciate the most 2nd: To these 80 people I sent a personal message suggesting another ways of communication with me. I have my personal contact information on a plain .html page (like good old days) including some links to other social networks I use. I know it might hurts a little and this is human. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+help@opensuse.org