On Monday 09 April 2007 07:45, Paul C. Leopardi wrote:
On Wed, 4 Apr 2007, Sabine Soellheim wrote:
Hi,
Within the framework of the new web design of *.opensuse.org, we are also discussing the mission statement for the openSUSE project and we would love to receive your input.
A mission statement - a clear and succinct representation of openSUSE project, a so called "one-liner" e.g. * openSUSE - Built to fit! * openSUSE - Have a lot of fun! * openSUSE - Caffeine for your machine! * The openSUSE project - A real alternative! * openSUSE - It's a wild thing! * openSUSE - An unlimited alternative! * openSUSE - The adaptable and innovative solution!
It should be included/supported by a set of our values such as open, leading edge distribution, fits everywhere, best of open source, innovative, user-friendly, comprehensive, etc.
Hi all, Sorry to chime in so late, but the examples given above are examples of advertising slogans, not mission statements.
Looking in examples, and demand for a one-liner it was created page: http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Slogan that is fastest growing page since I know. I wish that so many contributions we can see for other content.
I'm used to people that use foreign language, and in case of some discrepancies between word and examples, I trust example. In this case there was no complains, so it seems that example told us what was asked.
Here is Wikipedia's definition of a mission statement: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_statement
So why does openSUSE exist at all? What is openSUSE meant to accomplish? What does the openSUSE project do which is unique?
Eg. "The openSUSE Project takes the SUSE Linux platform to the next stage of evolution: by providing an open build service which allows the community and vendors alike to contribute and maintain open source packages which reflect the current state of the art; by allowing the wide community of openSUSE users to experience the best integrated and most comprehensive Linux distribution for home, office and server use; by providing a six-monthly release cycle with a public beta; and by providing the groundwork for Novell to produce fully supported rock-solid, stable and enterprise-class Linux distributions such as SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server."
It might be too long. I might have the details wrong, or have the wrong emphasis, but at least this is an example of a mission statement under the usual definition of the term. Not an advertising slogan.
The present intro on http://en.opensuse.org/Welcome_to_openSUSE.org "The openSUSE project is a worldwide community program sponsored by Novell that promotes the use of Linux everywhere. The program provides free and easy access to openSUSE. Here you will find a community of users and developers, who all have the same goal in mind—to create and distribute the world's most usable Linux."
is kind of mission statement, but it probably needs some refreshment. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The openSUSE is a project and a Linux distribution with a strong community around. Project sponsored by Novell promotes Linux for all our computing needs. It provides the free infrastructure for the community of users and developers that aim to create the world's most usable Linux distribution The openSUSE ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hmm. Maybe someone can jump in.