Hi, Fedora is fantastic at that, considering they are also made up of volunteers. Unpopular opinion (and not too pertinent, as it's a company): nobody in the GNU/Linux world has done it better than Ubuntu back in the Jono Bacon days. He was a laughing stock by a vocal minority, but he and Mark realized how important structured community building is way back when. Now every SaaS halfwit is trying to do the same, as that is the only way to reach more technical people, who are analytical and hold a personal grudge with marketing fluff :) Basically, to start off, we would need just a human readable log where people involved in the project could write what they are doing in a centrally located place, so we don't spend hours on time looking for viable info. Maybe an opensuse instance of OpenProject? Any thoughts? (I am really thinking about a really low-input "I'm doing this and that and when I finish I expect XYZ as an output". From then on everything is much easier. As for a chat liaison, I see some really meaningful/important people being very present there, so that's great (as I can't be present more than 30mins/day). As for the rest, I'm analyzing the page every day and will come up with a plan that I'll put into communication when time comes. -- Nenad Latinović nenad@latinovic.si
On 08/11/2021 7:34 AM Attila Pinter <adathor@protonmail.com> wrote:
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Wednesday, August 11th, 2021 at 11:56 AM, Nenad Latinović <nenad@latinovic.si> wrote:
Hi there, everyone,
Just in time for this topic. As per my email to the marketing mailing list (https://lists.opensuse.org/archives/list/marketing@lists.opensuse.org/thread...) the other day, here's my 2c.
I work in marketing, done even a short stint in a company doing marketing for developers (I'll add a caveat about marketing).
Yes, we have a board. Then we have people in the various teams.
What openSUSE needs is community builders.
That's exactly what the people you say MS, Apple and rest are doing.
The do-ocracy principle is great for setting the bar down the bazaar so everyone can participate how they see fit. Where the problems occur (cc the Project mailing list regarding the wiki conundrum) is that there's no communication. It's quite OK that openSUSE doesn't have project managers and such, but as a result, there's work being done that's siloed off, and a newsman doesn't know what is being done, how far is it from being done, is it even good/worth reporting on.
In such a state, I agree, weekly news is simply too much. I, myself, I have a full-time job, a kid and I wake up at 5AM doing online courses to better myself. In these mornings I would like to invest some time to help out openSUSE as I did years before.
What I can't do, is go around poking people what's new and what isn't.
What would help, would be a logging system, kanban board, /.../, where people would:
1- get exposure for the great work they're doing
2- log what's being done so we can filter out interesting parts
And this thing, that would also be of much help:
- etherpad reporting (seems that wiki entries are too obsolete, so there's got to be something with adding extra friction to the process) in an asynchronous way. Like a daily/weekly standup, but async when the team members actually have time.
You jot down what you're working on, and we then contact you for byweekly or monthly news.
But, to get back on topic. Problems I see are: - doocracy allowing people to "do", but they aren't vocal about it - no way for someone trying to do community building to find information in a structured and time-efficient way (I don't know why it's presupposed that people who are doing technical work should have reduced barriers, but people doing marketing are on their own)
Anyway, we Tweet about how openSUSE is underrated, but are yet to tell the people why. The best work in this field has been done by sysrich when I was active a couple of years ago, the dude was all over reddit, irc and blogging away in a really nice manner, explaining the strengths of openSUSE. I think we should build on that.
I am also drafting a SEO and content plan, will communicate when I wrap it up (nothing revolutionary, just to find channels where we could get new folks and communicate with others).
But yes, in technical projects, community building is a must. I, for one, appreciate the "adultness" of openSUSE, mainly folks getting in and grinding away without fuss, but that, from the outside, looks like the project is simply dead.
And as I see, it's not :)
Have a great one, will be getting back and hope for some feedback on this one.
--
Nenad Latinović
nenad@latinovic.si
Frankly we've been talking a lot about the communication issues in openSUSE in the /bar. And when I say a lot I mean this comes up almost every single time we're in there, but getting a hold on the matter is not trivial. Or at least not to me.
We would probably need this type of community building what you're suggesting. Fedora is not half bad at this kind of things, maybe we could observe what they're doing and cherry pick and see what works for us? Not super sure.
I can speak for the docs project tho, we're communicating at Telegram mostly (, but also use the doc ML on occasions, died down cause we didn't get much interest from there sadly, but it is very much open) as that is the origin of the "new volunteers/team", but during every meeting we (Adrien) take minutes which are distributed over the wiki and conversations are mostly happening under Github issues in regards to topics where anybody can just jump in to. I think the Leap release team is also doing a great job exposing their minutes on etherpad. Anyhow at docs we usually talk quite a lot and the telegram group is bridged with Matrix and Discord as well so communication shouldn't be much of an issue. We strongly believe that video calls and comms in general are a great way to boost productivity across the project and would be great to see other projects having a similar practice, but it would require motivation to do it not a "rule". How to do that is beyond me.
Br, A.