Peter Flodin wrote:
1. We get 10.0 out. This is priority number 1 for the openSUSE core team,
seen the quality of the product, sure this will be nice :-)
After a stable 10.0 is released, I would assume that user numbers here would grow enormously
from the <10 it's now, probably, but don't be to optimistic. I opened a suse wiki on early july and I'am the only who write in it (I don't know how many read). In same kind, after a heavy discussion on Linux Documentation project discuss list I was asked to create a tldp wiki page, and did so. _nobody_ used it since a month now. My self was quite present last month, but I was on holidays :-). Now I'm at work and have less time :-(.
I would assume that as part of this (phase 2) community building process, that individuals that have shown themselves to uphold a high standard and committment to openSUSE.org will be allowed to become a Wiki Admin, to help with everyday wiki admin stuff. (for example only admins can delete pages).
may be. I retire on June 2006 and would be pleased to work for SUSE (paid would be great, but free is nice also :-)
What is the policy behind this? That is the wrong question. This is YOUR community,
this is questionable. I would like it to be. This would significate the choice of many things being more opened than it is.
I don't think the Novell staff at openSUSE, has an answer or policy for everything we ask them, this is all new for them too.
you are probably true
I created the openSUSE Wiki Project, to try to organise some these things, why don't you visit - you could even start the "openSUSE Admin Nomination Policy". http://www.opensuse.org/OpenSUSE_Wiki_Project
and you have done yet a fine job :-) jdd -- pour m'écrire, aller sur: http://www.dodin.net http://valerie.dodin.net http://arvamip.free.fr