2010/6/18 Vincent Untz
Saying "pff, we don't need that" is just the usual reaction. We can make our project attractive for women, and we should :-)
I've nothing against the idea, but I do not understand how to make openSUSE "attractive to women"? What is preventing them now to take part to the community life and contribute? Are we so women-unfriendly, or they're simply not interested? I don't see a difference in treatment for men and women when they get in touch with the openSUSE community, at least not the online one.
This is the first thing I've seen which identifies a strategy which openSUSE could pursue and which would effectively differentiate oS from the other Linux distros.
I'm glad you also support the idea. I don't think we should do it to differentiate ourselves, though. It's just the right thing to do :-)
I don't think making openSUSE attractive for women is "a strategy", which should focus on broad goals. Best, Alberto -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-project+help@opensuse.org