I really didn't want encourage this threads continuation with more responses, but there's a few statements you throw out here which require futher comment. On 14 June 2015 at 08:33, Françoise Wybrecht <fwybrecht@ioda-net.ch> wrote:
thanks for the global answer about community organisation, (even if most of it were already clear, for me I mean).
If most of what I said was already clear for you, then I find it very strange you felt the need to simultaneously start 6 email threads on the topics I had to address in that mail.
as for example you and Robert, you don't have to answer to this list after your daywork in the middle of the night, or wait the week-end or hollidays to read some mails.
Sorry, this is nonsense. And just to make sure my opinion is clear despite my native use of English You are wrong That is incorrect No Negative I disagree I'm writing this email on a Sunday. My last response to this thread was yesterday, on a Saturday. Since being hired by SUSE I spend no less time in the evenings and weekends dealing with openSUSE stuff than I did before, and I know that you can find examples of almost every SUSE employee active on these mailinglists sending stuff outside of office hours. So please, end your misconception that all SUSE employees who contribute to openSUSE have all the time in the world to deal with long email threads. We don't As my previous email should have made clear, there are no SUSE employees with roles or responsibilities like a 'Community Manager', so theres no one being paid to deal with the mailinglists. They do it, because they want to, just like you. In many, most, if not all cases, they're making as much of a personal commitment to openSUSE as those contributors without a @suse.com email address and so this perception of 'us and them' *must* *stop* -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, email: opensuse-project+owner@opensuse.org