From: Adam B. <ad...@ad...> - 2004-10-10 13:50:17
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I think this is an unfortunate response... Personally, I have looked thru the documentation on the site and wondered exactly what "todo list" was being discussed... But then there was no real discussion, just requests/demands that I select something on a list (I couldn't find) and take complete ownership of said item... Perhaps, before abandoning the project so quickly, Christian, you could recognize that there are a lot of documents, RFCs, "architectures," etc., and it's difficult for those of us who didn't write some or all of these documents to know immediately what is being asked of us when you refer to one part of one specific document that (apparently) I haven't read...and I swear I read them all (and emailed you my comments!) not so long ago! Please don't take this as an insult or complaint. Instead, recognize it for what it is: I am (apparently) quite ignorant as to what you want of us, and so I understand why you're frustrated (because, being ignorant, I probably have NOT done what you've asked for) but I also think I can see room for some understanding on your part. How are we to "take up the reigns" and commit to parts of this project when there is no real roadmap for doing so...? Yes, yes -- I recognize that there is indeed a "roadmap" document, as well as an "architecture" document, plus goodness knows what else--and apparently there is even some code in the CVS repositiory. But as you've said yourself, the majority of people on this list (and the majority who have agreed to help) are either *not* entirely technically focused, or have entirely other motivations altogether (such as policy making, or technical writing...coming up with web sites and/or instructions for end-users, etc.). And of the technically-minded folk, you have more than a few who have said things like "I just got PHP installed and I bought a book on it -- give me a bit of time to learn how it works." These people are not worthless, nor are they lazy--far from it! WHen people are willing to pick up a book and learn an entirely new language just so they can jump on-board with our project, that's significant (imho) and not something we should just ignore in our frustrations that they weren't 100% ready to start coding on Day 1. Some of these people just need direction. Perhaps a little "higher-level" *and* "lower-level" direction is required here. When I started this project, initiated all the forums and mailing lists, etc., I really envisioned (perhaps incorrectly?) that we would use this forum to *discuss* what needed to be done on both a high level (e.g. "our code can issue certificates, but we want it to also do X, Y, Z") and a low level (e.g. "those of you working on module foo.php, are you running into parsing errors with function bar()?") -- but the discussion list (and the forums, for that matter) has remained fairly silent. The only discussions that seem to have thrived here are when we *did* get into technical or policy-related talks, such as the one related to language and UTF-8 not so long ago. (Not surprisingly, this is the *exact* type of discussion that thrived on CAcert's mailing list... Discussions of "should we do X or Y?" and "how do we fix this problem?" often resulted in multiple emails explaining the benefits of one thing or another, or even code samples!) Instead, we seem to be (perhaps unintentionally) using this forum to complain about how people aren't using this forum to our liking. By repeatedly telling people that they haven't jumped on board, that they haven't taken ownership for an item on a to-do list (which I don't think was published on this list, because I'm looking at the archives now and I don't see it) ---well, we're not accomplishing much. But rather than abandon ship, perhaps we should just abandon this current methodology? Maybe we should suggest specific things that need to be done, discuss them in a modular fashion (focusing on a part at a time) and having both high level discussions (so the policy-minded folks can have a say) and low-level discussions (so the coders can be involved and keep us grounded in what is "doable" and what is not, ask questions about this and that, etc.). In essence, I wonder if we couldn't use this forum more effectively if we simply started asking a few questions about how X, Y, Z should be done---get the ball rolling (in any direction, whether it be high level or low level), and get people engaged with the discussion. It seems unrealistic to just announce a new project and get all kinds of interest from all kinds of people immediately -- but we did!! So our project idea must be appealing in some form or fashion to the folks involved. With that in mind, maybe we shouldn't be asking "what's wrong with these folks, why won't they just work on this now?" and instead, maybe we should wonder how we managed to take all of these interested folks and deflate their excitement so completely (and quickly)? This *is* an exciting project. None of us would be here if we didn't think it was important, groundbreaking, and necessary work. So we have the foundation of a good group of people who want to see this thing succeed -- my question is then (not just to Christian, but to everyone) what do we need to do to get this ball rolling? Do we need an outline of some sort? (God knows I'd love a step-by-step list of what we need to do to "get started" so I could better understand where the hell we are and what we need to do... Anyone else?) Do we need to take some of the documents (which christian spent a LOT of time on and are VERY valuable) and distill them down into something a bit more short-term...? Perhaps if we had reasonable goals ahead of us, tasks that could be completed in days or weeks instead of months... I don't know. It's up to you guys. Let's hear some voices here. I admit to being silent a bit (because I didn't want to show my ignorance in that UTF-8 discusssion!) but I want this project to succeed as much as the rest of us... So what is holding us back? Leadership? A good plan? A more specific, but shorter-term roadmap? A list of modules, what we want them to do, and what their statuses are? What would allow YOU (whether you're a tech writer, a web designer, or a coder) to start contributing in the way you first imagined? What's holding you back? Let us know, and maybe we can remove some of those obstacles -- rather than just cursing the darkness, perhaps we can turn on a light or two. :) Thanks for all of you, your thoughts/suggestions up to now, and your willingness to move forward. We can do this, and we want to help make it happen, but we need your help to shape the direction we move in. I look forward to hearing from you--as I'm sure Christian does, too. Thanks, Adam Christian Barmala wrote: >Hi, > >When I asked you, who is interested in this project, several project members >didn't reply at all. From those who replied, the majority explained, that >they currently have no time to support the project. From those who had time, >the majority explained that they were not programmers. Those who remained, >subscribed to the developers list but until now, nobody volunteered for any >of the @todos of the software. > >This sad calculation reminds me to the difference between the topmost line >of my salary slip and what remains in my bank account after all payments >have been deduced. I understand that this loss seems to be a rule of life, >but then let's be honest and admit that we aren't able to run a project. > >I therefore consider the cooperation for software development as failed. >I'll withdraw from Unityca and do the development on my own based on my own >needs. If you should continue with Unityca one day and extend my software to >fit your needs, you may do this on your own, based on the GPL license. > >This is sad, but still better than pretending to cooperate and thus raise >mutual expectations, which won't be fulfilled. > >Christian > > > >------------------------------------------------------- >This SF.net email is sponsored by: IT Product Guide on ITManagersJournal >Use IT products in your business? Tell us what you think of them. Give us >Your Opinions, Get Free ThinkGeek Gift Certificates! Click to find out more >http://productguide.itmanagersjournal.com/guidepromo.tmpl >_______________________________________________ >Unityca-announce mailing list >Uni...@li... >https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/unityca-announce > > |