Hi all!
As you are aware the time for me on the board is running out quickly and the election is coming up. I have a guilty conscience about one thing that I really need to clear before stepping off the board, and that is the survey to the Stakeholder contacts I sent out on 2005-09-09. I have now (finally) gathered up and published the survey and the results on the old castaways swiki (wherever, we can move it). Only 4 months late... sigh: http://swiki.krampe.se/castaways/26 As you can see only Stephane, Yoshiki, Craig, Dan (through Craig) and Scott responded. Avi responded that he was working on it but got stuck due to thoughts about how to draw the line between personal opinions and community representation - and then I assume he simply forgot about it. We got no replies (and I sent out at least two reminders) from Andreas, Steve, Diego or Jeff. John responded that he had no time. I would also like to note that one of the two reminders was badly formulated by me, and Avi set me duly straight (and I apologized carefully), and one could also question the short timeframe for answering. Finally a very, very personal comment on this: I think it was a disappointing result. Not the answers that came in, but the lack of responses. One reason for me not publishing this at the time is of course also the lack of responses, but that is not an excuse - I should have published it anyway. One other thing I would like noted is that Andreas explicitly did not "acknowledge" the Coordinators-group in any way when we contacted him as a contact person for Croquet and Tweak, but he took the role anyway as an "envoy". I would only assume that goes for the current board too (after the merge with Stephane and Noury). So personally, when I read the recent posts about decision processes etc, I do it in the light of the above - with a tired ironic smile on my face. regards, Göran |
On 23.01.2006, at 08:57, [hidden email] wrote: > > > One other thing I would like noted is that Andreas explicitly did not > "acknowledge" the Coordinators-group in any way when we contacted > him as > a contact person for Croquet and Tweak, but he took the role anyway as > an "envoy". I would only assume that goes for the current board too > (after the merge with Stephane and Noury). > > So personally, when I read the recent posts about decision processes > etc, I do it in the light of the above - with a tired ironic smile > on my > face. > Exactly. We (Stef, Michael and I) did, well before the Castaway thing, a first run at a Sqf. Not democratic, more an "industrie consortium" thing of the projects using Squeak. We contacted the Croquet and Tweak and Squeakland people, but we got a response from Andreas that a) This was the dumbest Idea ever, that b) he did not want the be involved in any such "talking clubs". (I did not look at the exact wording, but that's how I understood it). And shortly after that Michael had to stop his activities wrt. to a Sqf (for "political reasons"), and we got never even a single answer from any of the squeakland/croquet people... thus the thing was dead. Of course, subsequent runs at the SqF did not involve Andreas, Croquet,Tweak, Squeakland as they clearly communicated that we are idiots and that they did not want to be involved. Marcus |
In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
Hi Goran,
[hidden email] wrote: > One other thing I would like noted is that Andreas explicitly did not > "acknowledge" the Coordinators-group in any way when we contacted him as > a contact person for Croquet and Tweak, but he took the role anyway as > an "envoy". I would only assume that goes for the current board too > (after the merge with Stephane and Noury). I'm actually looking forward to changing that relation when there is a board that has an actual mandate by the community. Even if it's a rough cut with the elections it will be indefinitely better than the current or (even worse) the initial situation. > So personally, when I read the recent posts about decision processes > etc, I do it in the light of the above - with a tired ironic smile on my > face. *Shrug* If that's what it takes. I was just trying to be helpful in what I considered an actual (non-rethorical) question in the context of a discussion. I really do think that transparent decision processes are important to address these issues. Cheers, - Andreas |
Hi Andreas!
Andreas Raab <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Goran, > > [hidden email] wrote: > > One other thing I would like noted is that Andreas explicitly did not > > "acknowledge" the Coordinators-group in any way when we contacted him as > > a contact person for Croquet and Tweak, but he took the role anyway as > > an "envoy". I would only assume that goes for the current board too > > (after the merge with Stephane and Noury). > > I'm actually looking forward to changing that relation when there is a > board that has an actual mandate by the community. Even if it's a rough > cut with the elections it will be indefinitely better than the current > or (even worse) the initial situation. Good! And btw, what are *you* doing to help this forward? It is all about talkers and doers - you do *tons* of stuff technically (and you know I respect and admire that immensely) but AFAIK you haven't helped us move an inch forward regarding our self organization - on the *contrary*. So sure, fee free to "look forward" to a new board - but even better: *help* this community getting it. And if you think I am the only one feeling this - read Marcus' post. > > So personally, when I read the recent posts about decision processes > > etc, I do it in the light of the above - with a tired ironic smile on my > > face. > > *Shrug* If that's what it takes. I was just trying to be helpful in what > I considered an actual (non-rethorical) question in the context of a > discussion. I really do think that transparent decision processes are > important to address these issues. > > Cheers, > - Andreas I just humbly wonder why you didn't bother to even *reply* to the survey emails which AFAIK asked quite a few questions regarding these things. Regarding the question at hand - of course, I agree - a better decision process *is* important - we all agree on that. The problem is *getting it*. I mean, if the stakeholder contact persons don't even bother answer our emails - then what chance do we have? A decision *process* involves all parties - not just the board. It is also worth remembering that the *current* team model delegates how each team works to the team leader. The minimalism in that is intentional to make it as "easy" as possible to step up as a team leader. If we add too much bureaucracy to the team model it will probably have a negative effect. Concrete proposal to the new board: One idea to tackle this without introducing bureacracy in the team model is to make the board offer a "service" for this (using the board contact that each team leader has) so that the team leader doesn't need to bother too much with the hows and whats. To be more concrete: If say the release team leader thinks he needs to get a vote on planned features to make some tough decisions - he simply asks the board contact to "make it happen" with a list of things to vote on. The board knows how to perform such a vote (software, announcement, document it for posterity etc) and feed the result back to the team leader. In short - the board could offer a "decision process" to the team leaders that they can use when they see fit. regards, Göran |
In reply to this post by Andreas.Raab
Andreas Raab a écrit :
> Hi Goran, > > [hidden email] wrote: > >> One other thing I would like noted is that Andreas explicitly did not >> "acknowledge" the Coordinators-group in any way when we contacted him as >> a contact person for Croquet and Tweak, but he took the role anyway as >> an "envoy". I would only assume that goes for the current board too >> (after the merge with Stephane and Noury). > > > I'm actually looking forward to changing that relation when there is a > board that has an actual mandate by the community. Even if it's a rough It is a bit like moving the cursor on step, but without a solution. Now can you define community? Hum, even more important define what is "a representative community" with voting power? I will give one example. The Debian project, at a first look it is very democratic, there are regular election to take decision on the direction to take. But looking more accurately about what is this community (with the right to vote) it is quite restrictive. Indeed, the Debian community is only composed of Debian developpers which are coopted after a quite long examination process. Therefore, this Debian developper community is not the larger Debian user community. Hug! it will be a real mess if this whole community could vote and probably it will just make collapse the Debian project. I still think that the 1st important thing who matter is to have brillant people, like you, working all together. And only those people making real the things should have the right to vote to make choice in the direction to take. It is just common sense. Hilaire |
In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
Hi Goran,
>>I'm actually looking forward to changing that relation when there is a >>board that has an actual mandate by the community. Even if it's a rough >>cut with the elections it will be indefinitely better than the current >>or (even worse) the initial situation. > > Good! And btw, what are *you* doing to help this forward? It is all > about talkers and doers - you do *tons* of stuff technically (and you > know I respect and admire that immensely) but AFAIK you haven't helped > us move an inch forward regarding our self organization - on the > *contrary*. Well, I'm sure it's all my fault, somehow ;-) If that makes you feel any better, be my guest (I actually mean it the way I say it). And one of the things I'm currently doing (or rather "trying" but I'm getting a little better) is to attempt to not rise to a rethorical bait that's thrown my way. Let's see if I can make it through this email safely... > So sure, fee free to "look forward" to a new board - but even better: > *help* this community getting it. And if you think I am the only one > feeling this - read Marcus' post. If I would know how to respond to it, or if I would feel that I could actually help clarifying matters, I certainly would. I have started a number of discussions with Marcus about these issues in the past (in German, as you may guess as it's the native language for both of us and somewhat limits the number of misunderstandings) but unfortunately, it seems that these days Marcus can't even use my name without an accusation right next to it. To bad, but I'm trying hard not to follow him there. It is not going to get either of us anywhere, anyway. > I just humbly wonder why you didn't bother to even *reply* to the survey > emails which AFAIK asked quite a few questions regarding these things. Honestly? Really, there were a couple of things. First, I'm busy. Second, I didn't find the questions neither terribly relevant, nor terribly interesting, nor terribly related to what we are doing. Most of it seemed like reflections on the state of affairs ("what do you think about the islanders", "what do you think about m17n", "would you like to set up a team") and while this is all nice and well I felt that the only relevant parts at that point where those that related to the future. And here, I didn't dare to speak my mind freely - simply because you promised to publish the results and if I would say what the most likely course of action is it would get me even more of a reputation of being an evil guy who wants to prevent everyone from doing anything. So none of this was really appealing to me. And I actually almost wrote you a message saying just that, when I got your "order to comply or else" and let me just say, that *really* pissed me off. I simply deleted all of those messages to make sure I don't even accidentally reply (because that would've been seriously out of whack even for my measures). And I'm glad I did that. And you should be, too. End of story. > Regarding the question at hand - of course, I agree - a better decision > process *is* important - we all agree on that. The problem is *getting > it*. I mean, if the stakeholder contact persons don't even bother answer > our emails - then what chance do we have? A decision *process* involves > all parties - not just the board. This almost reads as if that survey wasn't so voluntary after all. Every now and then I'm still wondering a little about this btw, and it is interesting to see how you react to the fact that people choose not to participate in an unsolicitated and (from what I could tell) entirely voluntary survey. > It is also worth remembering that the *current* team model delegates how > each team works to the team leader. The minimalism in that is > intentional to make it as "easy" as possible to step up as a team > leader. If we add too much bureaucracy to the team model it will > probably have a negative effect. I'm actually perfectly fine on the team-level but this is about strategic directions. Remember I was specifically mentioning the "big ticket items". I don't think it's worth having decisions about each and every individual feature (that sure as hell would be way to bureaucratic). But the question whether an entire new package should be included in a "basic" image is something where I think a bit of a process wouldn't hurt - in particular if there are (as usual) strong proponents as well as strong opponents. Cheers, - Andreas |
Hi Andreas!
Long post, but what the heck. Andreas Raab <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Goran, > > >>I'm actually looking forward to changing that relation when there is a > >>board that has an actual mandate by the community. Even if it's a rough > >>cut with the elections it will be indefinitely better than the current > >>or (even worse) the initial situation. > > > > Good! And btw, what are *you* doing to help this forward? It is all > > about talkers and doers - you do *tons* of stuff technically (and you > > know I respect and admire that immensely) but AFAIK you haven't helped > > us move an inch forward regarding our self organization - on the > > *contrary*. > > Well, I'm sure it's all my fault, somehow ;-) If that makes you feel any > better, be my guest (I actually mean it the way I say it). I really don't think it is "all your fault" and I didn't imply that. I just meant that there is a group of people here (the board and lots of people in teams working too) that is trying as good as we can using our own free time. Sitting on the side complaining isn't helping, simple as that (no offense intended - stating a fact). The whole point with the current board was that we needed to "get going" - and the SqF bootstrap wasn't going anywhere. Now we are getting dangerously close (IMHO) to a similar fate with the upcoming election. If you really mean that you are positive towards the new upcoming board and election, help out with it so that it turns out successful. > And one of > the things I'm currently doing (or rather "trying" but I'm getting a > little better) is to attempt to not rise to a rethorical bait that's > thrown my way. Let's see if I can make it through this email safely... I am taking a deep breath and will try to make this reply less emotional too. :) > > So sure, fee free to "look forward" to a new board - but even better: > > *help* this community getting it. And if you think I am the only one > > feeling this - read Marcus' post. > > If I would know how to respond to it, or if I would feel that I could > actually help clarifying matters, I certainly would. I have started a > number of discussions with Marcus about these issues in the past (in > German, as you may guess as it's the native language for both of us and > somewhat limits the number of misunderstandings) but unfortunately, it > seems that these days Marcus can't even use my name without an > accusation right next to it. To bad, but I'm trying hard not to follow > him there. It is not going to get either of us anywhere, anyway. Well, it has been lots of water under the bridge but I still feel quite uneasy about what happened and I really can't get a grip on your intentions/motives anymore. Yes, this is a vague statement - but it is just how I feel and I don't want to dwelve deeper into the reasons in public. And to me personally it doesn't matter much soon anyway - since I will not be sitting on the board anymore. > > I just humbly wonder why you didn't bother to even *reply* to the survey > > emails which AFAIK asked quite a few questions regarding these things. > > Honestly? Really, there were a couple of things. First, I'm busy. Too busy to reply and say so? For two weeks? > Second, I didn't find the questions neither terribly relevant, nor > terribly interesting, nor terribly related to what we are doing. Most of > it seemed like reflections on the state of affairs ("what do you think > about the islanders", "what do you think about m17n", "would you like to > set up a team") and while this is all nice and well I felt that the only > relevant parts at that point where those that related to the future. And what about: "On 2006-02-15 the Coordinators are stepping down. At that time (or earlier) the Squeak community needs to have a new regime in place. - Do you have any suggestions or specific ideas on how such a regime should look and work? - Do you have any specific views on how it definitely should NOT look/work?" If that question (for example) wasn't about the future then... what? > And > here, I didn't dare to speak my mind freely - simply because you > promised to publish the results and if I would say what the most likely > course of action is it would get me even more of a reputation of being > an evil guy who wants to prevent everyone from doing anything. So none > of this was really appealing to me. I would like to note that the email said: "If you wish to give "off the record" feedback you can do so by simply separately emailing [hidden email] which is the non public mailinglist of the Coordinators." > And I actually almost wrote you a message saying just that, when I got > your "order to comply or else" and let me just say, that *really* pissed > me off. I simply deleted all of those messages to make sure I don't even > accidentally reply (because that would've been seriously out of whack > even for my measures). And I'm glad I did that. And you should be, too. > > End of story. Ok, for people to understand what this is about I here include both reminders sent out AND the subsequent apology: ----first reminder------------- Hi people! This is a reminder about the Stakeholder survey sent out on the 9th september. We really want your views in order to make the best of it all. The deadline is 23rd september. regards, Göran Krampe PS. Dan? Craig said he will fill it out for you (WeatherStation), so you can probably ignore this. ----end------- ----second reminder------------- Hi people! This is the last reminder about the Stakeholder survey sent out on the 9th september. We really want your views in order to make the best of it all. The deadline is tomorrow, 23rd september. If you choose to not answer the survey then we would appreciate if you reply with the reason or that you reconsider being the contact person for the Stakeholder community you represent. You may very well have good reasons for not having responded, like being very busy or perhaps these emails are stuck in your spam filter - but we can't really know. :) regards, Göran Krampe -----end-------------- The part upsetting Avi and obviously you is the "reconsider" bit. I admit that paragraph was clumsily written but there was also a sincere intention behind it - if you (and I admit it was subconsciously aimed at you Andreas) don't want to have this role then you can give it to someone else. It was not meant as a "threat" because I have never viewed the contact persons as "chosen" by us but rather self chosen by the community (or whatever). I then sent out a third email with the apology - ok, including that too without Avi's text: -----apology-------------------- Avi is of course totally right - and I am sorry if I upset people. My reminder was badly written, and it is my fault. I agree that it sounded offensive (I honestly didn't mean to, but it does sound bad). And no, we will not refuse to listen to what you say nor will we appoint anyone else to be the contact person. We can't do that anyway, IMHO it is the Stakeholder communities that choose who takes that role, not us. When I sent out the survey (which was crosschecked with the other Coords) I wanted to set a deadline because we want to present the results "all together" and we want to be able to discuss the results publically in squeak-dev and hopefully plan ahead based on it. So it is important that it includes feedback from all 12. 2 weeks sounded like fair time to me, but perhaps it is too short for many of you. Feel free to reply and tell us when you will have time to reply - because it is important to us to know the timeframe. And this *is* an attempt of cooperation, not "management". In short - we want your thoughts and the idea was to ask questions instead of just saying "Got any feedback?" - which probably wouldn't lead to much. So again, I am sorry if this turned bad - it was never the intention - I just wanted to put in words how important we think this is - and I failed miserably. ;) And yes, of course you can send feedback at *any* time - though we haven't gotten any AFAIK yet. :) So... can you forgive me for the clumsiness and either: - Send in your survey answers - Reply with an approximation on when we can otherwise get it - Or reply in any other way for that matter. :) Ok? We are fine? I hope so. regards, Göran ----end------------- Now there you go. I can't judge if my reminders were really *that* upsetting, and IMHO the apology was pretty darn clear - but it doesn't matter. Fact remains, we got ZERO replies from 5 out of 12 stakeholder communities. > > Regarding the question at hand - of course, I agree - a better decision > > process *is* important - we all agree on that. The problem is *getting > > it*. I mean, if the stakeholder contact persons don't even bother answer > > our emails - then what chance do we have? A decision *process* involves > > all parties - not just the board. > > This almost reads as if that survey wasn't so voluntary after all. > Every > now and then I'm still wondering a little about this btw, and it is > interesting to see how you react to the fact that people choose not to > participate in an unsolicitated and (from what I could tell) entirely > voluntary survey. Sigh. Everything in this community is voluntary. And just answering "sorry, no time now" or whatever would have been quite ok (like John did). But what is the whole point being a contact person if you don't want to communicate with us? Let me quote from the email inviting you to be a contact person: "We want to find a single individual for each project willing to become a "contact person" for that project. There are no obligations in this role - we just want to: - Be able to send out questions and info and request potential feedback before going forward with certain plans that may affect you. - Be able to get alerts from you if you need to grab our attention for some reason." Now, sure - it says "there are no obligations" but it also clearly says that we want to be able to send out questions etc. And no, there is nothing forcing you to answer - but IMHO the least we could expect is that you bother to reply. And note that we didn't spam you or anything - it was the *only* thing we have ever sent out! > > It is also worth remembering that the *current* team model delegates how > > each team works to the team leader. The minimalism in that is > > intentional to make it as "easy" as possible to step up as a team > > leader. If we add too much bureaucracy to the team model it will > > probably have a negative effect. > > I'm actually perfectly fine on the team-level but this is about > strategic directions. Remember I was specifically mentioning the "big > ticket items". I don't think it's worth having decisions about each and > every individual feature (that sure as hell would be way to > bureaucratic). But the question whether an entire new package should be > included in a "basic" image is something where I think a bit of a > process wouldn't hurt - in particular if there are (as usual) strong > proponents as well as strong opponents. Yes, I agree - but I still am uncertain where this "belongs". Some people might prefer a "strong" board taking these decisions themselves simply by being the board (but using votes or whatever as input). Others may argue that the board should primarily coordinate and that these decisions belong in some team. I really don't know. > Cheers, > - Andreas cheers (really), Göran |
In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
+ 1
Pissing on our past efforts to build the squeakFoundation does not help, and is rather easy and populist. "Yeah squeak is not democratic" We have an archive full of trials to motivate people to participate and failure. Stef >> [hidden email] wrote: >>> One other thing I would like noted is that Andreas explicitly did >>> not >>> "acknowledge" the Coordinators-group in any way when we contacted >>> him as >>> a contact person for Croquet and Tweak, but he took the role >>> anyway as >>> an "envoy". I would only assume that goes for the current board too >>> (after the merge with Stephane and Noury). >> >> I'm actually looking forward to changing that relation when there >> is a >> board that has an actual mandate by the community. Even if it's a >> rough >> cut with the elections it will be indefinitely better than the >> current >> or (even worse) the initial situation. > > Good! And btw, what are *you* doing to help this forward? It is all > about talkers and doers - you do *tons* of stuff technically (and you > know I respect and admire that immensely) but AFAIK you haven't helped > us move an inch forward regarding our self organization - on the > *contrary*. > > So sure, fee free to "look forward" to a new board - but even better: > *help* this community getting it. And if you think I am the only one > feeling this - read Marcus' post. > >>> So personally, when I read the recent posts about decision processes >>> etc, I do it in the light of the above - with a tired ironic >>> smile on my >>> face. >> >> *Shrug* If that's what it takes. I was just trying to be helpful >> in what >> I considered an actual (non-rethorical) question in the context of a >> discussion. I really do think that transparent decision processes are >> important to address these issues. >> >> Cheers, >> - Andreas > > I just humbly wonder why you didn't bother to even *reply* to the > survey > emails which AFAIK asked quite a few questions regarding these things. > Regarding the question at hand - of course, I agree - a better > decision > process *is* important - we all agree on that. The problem is *getting > it*. I mean, if the stakeholder contact persons don't even bother > answer > our emails - then what chance do we have? A decision *process* > involves > all parties - not just the board. > > It is also worth remembering that the *current* team model > delegates how > each team works to the team leader. The minimalism in that is > intentional to make it as "easy" as possible to step up as a team > leader. If we add too much bureaucracy to the team model it will > probably have a negative effect. > > Concrete proposal to the new board: > > One idea to tackle this without introducing bureacracy in the team > model > is to make the board offer a "service" for this (using the board > contact > that each team leader has) so that the team leader doesn't need to > bother too much with the hows and whats. To be more concrete: > > If say the release team leader thinks he needs to get a vote on > planned > features to make some tough decisions - he simply asks the board > contact > to "make it happen" with a list of things to vote on. The board knows > how to perform such a vote (software, announcement, document it for > posterity etc) and feed the result back to the team leader. In short - > the board could offer a "decision process" to the team leaders that > they > can use when they see fit. > > regards, Göran > |
In reply to this post by Hilaire Fernandes-5
> > I still think that the 1st important thing who matter is to have > brillant people, like you, working all together. And only those > people making real the things should have the right to vote to make > choice in the direction to take. It is just common sense. I agree. If you read what we wrote with mike and marcus at that time on http://smallwiki.unibe.ch/squeakfoundation this was the idea. This does not force us to be a closed club, but trust and having fun is important especially when talking about free time. Because I'm wondering how many people get money to work on (not with) squeak and that they work get used by the community. Stef |
In reply to this post by Andreas.Raab
> If I would know how to respond to it, or if I would feel that I
> could actually help clarifying matters, I certainly would. I have > started a number of discussions with Marcus about these issues in > the past (in German, as you may guess as it's the native language > for both of us and somewhat limits the number of misunderstandings) > but unfortunately, it seems that these days Marcus can't even use > my name without an accusation right next to it. To bad, but I'm > trying hard not to follow him there. It is not going to get either > of us anywhere, anyway. This is not my contribution. And I think that marcus is smart enough and have his analysis that I respect as much as I respect you. And I would like to see a better communication between us, which was an explicit goal of the squeakfoundation that we have a way to communicate.... But we as a community failed there. Nobody from etoys responded, nor tweakers, .... to our discussions or will of communication in the context of the old dead squeakfoundation. At least we can acknowlegde that we tried hard and failed. Stef |
In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
Hi Goran -
[hidden email] wrote: > The whole point with the current board was that we needed to "get going" > - and the SqF bootstrap wasn't going anywhere. Now we are getting > dangerously close (IMHO) to a similar fate with the upcoming election. I think this is at the heart of our disagreement. I do not agree that the "SqF bootstrap wasn't going anywhere" in a form that would require such drastic actions. Sure, it wasn't the fastest, but it was trying to get agreement, and that was part of its appeal. Neither do I think that the election "is in danger". It may be in danger wrt your deadline but that was your deadline, not theirs IIRC. > If you really mean that you are positive towards the new upcoming board > and election, help out with it so that it turns out successful. I really mean that. But please keep in mind that I do have a number of other things on my plate (#1 being Hedgehog right now) and will probably not have much spare time to spend on these issues. > Well, it has been lots of water under the bridge but I still feel quite > uneasy about what happened and I really can't get a grip on your > intentions/motives anymore. Yes, this is a vague statement - but it is > just how I feel and I don't want to dwelve deeper into the reasons in > public. Strangely enough, this almost precisely describes my feelings towards the islanders group (and in particular yours truly). Now, from my point of view, my motivations are simple: Technically, I need a robust basis for the work going on in Tweak/Croquet. The smaller the basis the better because it limits maintenance efforts. If you look at the work I do for the community you'll find that there is an obvious overlap of interests: ToolBuilder, Graphics, FFI, Compression are all core technologies that we use heavily in our projects and where it makes perfect sense to put some work in. In the larger picture, because of the dependency on other parts of the system, I am in the conservative camp - changes are generally bad since we have no control and little influence on what precisely happens where (just two days ago I got reminded again how small that influence is in practice). You should therefore be prepared that if I comment on such issues that I'll raise the conservative voice - this is part of my responsibility to the other projects I'm in. From the community point of view (meaning Squeak-dev community) I have actually very little motivations - I am not trying to achieve anything in particular (which may explain your vague feeling). Mostly I'm just throwing in my $.02 for what it's worth. I do dislike the islander setup, I dislike the way it came about, and I will be happy to see something that represents the community in the best way possible. If you look at what I generally do and say in light of the above I think you won't find many inconsistencies. >>>I just humbly wonder why you didn't bother to even *reply* to the survey >>>emails which AFAIK asked quite a few questions regarding these things. >> >>Honestly? Really, there were a couple of things. First, I'm busy. > > Too busy to reply and say so? For two weeks? More for like eight weeks. And originally, like I was saying I was planning on writing something back. That was up until the point of "that" message. > And what about: [... snip ...] > If that question (for example) wasn't about the future then... what? Yes, they are. But like I said: >>And >>here, I didn't dare to speak my mind freely - simply because you >>promised to publish the results and if I would say what the most likely >>course of action is it would get me even more of a reputation of being >>an evil guy who wants to prevent everyone from doing anything. So none >>of this was really appealing to me. > > I would like to note that the email said: > > "If you wish to give "off the record" feedback you can do so by simply > separately emailing [hidden email] which > is the non public mailinglist of the Coordinators." Actually, I don't remember this and I probably interpreted that differently (e.g., as "if you have any OTHER feedback" outside of that survey). Sorry, my bad. > Ok, for people to understand what this is about I here include both > reminders sent out AND the subsequent apology: [... snip ...] > The part upsetting Avi and obviously you is the "reconsider" bit. I > admit that paragraph was clumsily written but there was also a sincere > intention behind it - if you (and I admit it was subconsciously aimed at > you Andreas) don't want to have this role then you can give it to > someone else. I didn't exactly volunteer for that role either. I was asked to do it and since there wasn't a compelling logical argument against it I went along with it. > Now there you go. I can't judge if my reminders were really *that* > upsetting, and IMHO the apology was pretty darn clear - but it doesn't > matter. Fact remains, we got ZERO replies from 5 out of 12 stakeholder > communities. Yes, and? (I'm not sure if you are trying to make an argument here - if you do, I don't get it) > But what is the whole point being a contact person if you don't want to > communicate with us? Let me quote from the email inviting you to be a > contact person: > [... snip ...] > > Now, sure - it says "there are no obligations" but it also clearly says > that we want to be able to send out questions etc. And no, there is > nothing forcing you to answer - but IMHO the least we could expect is > that you bother to reply. You know, you're right. I should have sent an email saying "thanks for sending this, I received it, and I may or may not reply within the time frame you set". I apologize for not doing that, I will definitely do it in the future. I don't think this would've changed the gist of this discussion (in which case we would discuss "not answering the questions" instead of "not answering") but I should've done it nonetheless. Sorry for that. Cheers, - Andreas |
On [various days], Andreas Raab and Goran Krampe wrote:
>[a lot of text] > Err.... guys - these discussions where everything is quoted paragraph by paragraph always give me the creeps. It's the sort of stuff one should reserve for a court of law, not for (hopefully) friendly discourse. So please hug and kiss and let's kickstart that election, ok? ;-) Regards, Cees |
In reply to this post by Andreas.Raab
On 24-Jan-06, at 11:22 AM, Andreas Raab wrote: > > > Now, from my point of view, my motivations are simple: Technically, > I need a robust basis for the work going on in Tweak/Croquet. The > smaller the basis the better because it limits maintenance efforts. > If you look at the work I do for the community you'll find that > there is an obvious overlap of interests: ToolBuilder, Graphics, > FFI, Compression are all core technologies that we use heavily in > our projects and where it makes perfect sense to put some work in. > > In the larger picture, because of the dependency on other parts of > the system, I am in the conservative camp - changes are generally > bad since we have no control and little influence on what precisely > happens where (just two days ago I got reminded again how small > that influence is in practice). You should therefore be prepared > that if I comment on such issues that I'll raise the conservative > voice - this is part of my responsibility to the other projects I'm > in. Here you are expressing the major problem in a group project- - You want everything else to stay the same so your massive changes can go ahead. - So does everyone else doing any work! We simply can't make any useful progress under such conditions. Forward progress causes breakage and it costs much effort to provide invisible mogration support. Spending time on that prevents forward progress - and puts people off ever bothering. tim -- tim Rowledge; [hidden email]; http://www.rowledge.org/tim If you never try anything new, you'll miss out on many of life's great disappointments |
tim Rowledge skrev:
> > On 24-Jan-06, at 11:22 AM, Andreas Raab wrote: >> >> >> Now, from my point of view, my motivations are simple: Technically, I >> need a robust basis for the work going on in Tweak/Croquet. The >> smaller the basis the better because it limits maintenance efforts. >> If you look at the work I do for the community you'll find that there >> is an obvious overlap of interests: ToolBuilder, Graphics, FFI, >> Compression are all core technologies that we use heavily in our >> projects and where it makes perfect sense to put some work in. >> >> In the larger picture, because of the dependency on other parts of >> the system, I am in the conservative camp - changes are generally bad >> since we have no control and little influence on what precisely >> happens where (just two days ago I got reminded again how small that >> influence is in practice). You should therefore be prepared that if I >> comment on such issues that I'll raise the conservative voice - this >> is part of my responsibility to the other projects I'm in. > > Here you are expressing the major problem in a group project- > - You want everything else to stay the same so your massive changes > can go ahead. > - So does everyone else doing any work! > > We simply can't make any useful progress under such conditions. > Forward progress causes breakage and it costs much effort to provide > invisible mogration support. Spending time on that prevents forward > progress - and puts people off ever bothering. > > tim > -- > tim Rowledge; [hidden email]; http://www.rowledge.org/tim > If you never try anything new, you'll miss out on many of life's great > disappointments Karl > > > > > |
On 24-Jan-06, at 12:27 PM, karl wrote: > tim Rowledge skrev: >> >> >> We simply can't make any useful progress under such conditions. >> Forward progress causes breakage and it costs much effort to >> provide invisible mogration support. Spending time on that >> prevents forward progress - and puts people off ever bothering. >> >> tim >> -- >> tim Rowledge; [hidden email]; http://www.rowledge.org/tim >> If you never try anything new, you'll miss out on many of life's >> great disappointments > :-) It is quite remarkable how a random number generator can provide such appropriate commentary on an email. Makes you wonder how so many people cannot cope with the idea of randomness causing evolution. tim -- tim Rowledge; [hidden email]; http://www.rowledge.org/tim To err is human; to really foul things up requires a computer. |
In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
> From: [...] Hilaire Fernandes
> Now can you define community? Hum, even more important > define what is > "a representative community" with voting power? That's where we got hung up for a long, long time within the elections team. At the moment, I believe the proposal is to go for a very broad definition of representative community in order to get the process running. If that becomes unpleasant, the team working on the election process* will probably have to narrow it down. - Peter * Which will itself have to be made 'legitimate' at some point in the near future, possibly by having its own set of elections. |
On 1/24/06, Peter Crowther <[hidden email]> wrote:
> At the moment, I believe the proposal is to go for a very broad > definition of representative community in order to get the process > running. If that becomes unpleasant, the team working on the > election process* will probably have to narrow it down. > I'll chip in with some experience from the Jini community. Some safety measures there were built in because the 'board' was built up from three groups: Sun (as original contributor), Commercial Licensees, and Individuals. Each group got three seats on the board. Definition of the first two groups was clear, and then things got stalled about defining the last group. In the end of the day, it was decided just to go ahead by letting the group define itself - as with Squeak, the community was mostly friendly, not a lot of trolls and stuff, and it turned out to go well. As far as I know (I was only running in the first election and left the community after my first year on the board), this broad definition still holds up. I think the Squeak community and the Debian user community are entirely different beasts... > * Which will itself have to be made 'legitimate' at some point in the > near future, possibly by having its own set of elections. > Bootstrapping always makes my head spin :-) |
In reply to this post by Andreas.Raab
Hi Andreas!
Trying to wrap this up so that we can put it behind us (hopefully). Kiss and make up is probably a lofty goal :), but at least we could get it off our backs. Andreas Raab <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Goran - > > [hidden email] wrote: > > The whole point with the current board was that we needed to "get going" > > - and the SqF bootstrap wasn't going anywhere. Now we are getting > > dangerously close (IMHO) to a similar fate with the upcoming election. > > I think this is at the heart of our disagreement. I do not agree that > the "SqF bootstrap wasn't going anywhere" in a form that would require > such drastic actions. Sure, it wasn't the fastest, but it was trying to > get agreement, and that was part of its appeal. Well, it is fine if you disagree with that - we are all entitled different opinions. It is in the past anyway. I just skimmed the email exchange over those couple of days and well, it is a lot of email and it is hard to reconstruct all thoughts etc. It is still very clear to me that the SqF formation was going *nowhere* and that we felt that something needed to be done to get *something* set up *in the meantime*. But again, who knows - perhaps SqF would have gotten going eventually, we will never really know. > Neither do I think that > the election "is in danger". It may be in danger wrt your deadline but > that was your deadline, not theirs IIRC. We will see. Just let it be noted that I am worried. I am worried about it getting done at all and I am worried about too few people showing up to vote. > > If you really mean that you are positive towards the new upcoming board > > and election, help out with it so that it turns out successful. > > I really mean that. But please keep in mind that I do have a number of Good, then I choose to believe you. > other things on my plate (#1 being Hedgehog right now) and will probably > not have much spare time to spend on these issues. Which is of course all fine. And my humble opinion is that the people who *do* take the time for these "community things" (and that is *free* time, not payed time) should be respected for that and not distrusted. And this is directed to the whole squeak-dev - not to you. > > Well, it has been lots of water under the bridge but I still feel quite > > uneasy about what happened and I really can't get a grip on your > > intentions/motives anymore. Yes, this is a vague statement - but it is > > just how I feel and I don't want to dwelve deeper into the reasons in > > public. > > Strangely enough, this almost precisely describes my feelings towards > the islanders group (and in particular yours truly). Which I still don't understand. The fact remains that I have zero economic investments in Squeak beside the fact that I have invested my own time to know it as a tool and that I have gotten a payback in the form of being part of a fantastic community. But if I am not mistaken you have quite a lot of real investments "in Squeak", right? Anyway, it is quite funny that you *still* say you distrust me/us after all that has been done and the fact that I am stepping down and that we are holding an election etc etc. You still think I have some dark agenda stuck up my sleeve? :) Oh, and btw - Dan have gotten all emails exchanged internally in the group (and continues to do so after merging with Stephane/Noury) so if there was any dark deeds brewing you could just ask him. :) > Now, from my point of view, my motivations are simple: Technically, I > need a robust basis for the work going on in Tweak/Croquet. The smaller > the basis the better because it limits maintenance efforts. If you look > at the work I do for the community you'll find that there is an obvious > overlap of interests: ToolBuilder, Graphics, FFI, Compression are all > core technologies that we use heavily in our projects and where it makes > perfect sense to put some work in. > > In the larger picture, because of the dependency on other parts of the > system, I am in the conservative camp - changes are generally bad since > we have no control and little influence on what precisely happens where > (just two days ago I got reminded again how small that influence is in > practice). You should therefore be prepared that if I comment on such > issues that I'll raise the conservative voice - this is part of my > responsibility to the other projects I'm in. I understand your POV here but I don't really understand why you say you have "no control" and "little influence". IMHO you have lots of influence being in the position that you are (Croquet, Tweak, Win32 VM, Toolbuilder/Graphics etc etc) and the community listens very carefully to whatever you have to say. And that has always included the board too. > From the community point of view (meaning Squeak-dev community) I have > actually very little motivations - I am not trying to achieve anything > in particular (which may explain your vague feeling). No, my feeling is based on earlier happenings. > Mostly I'm just > throwing in my $.02 for what it's worth. I do dislike the islander > setup, I dislike the way it came about, and I will be happy to see > something that represents the community in the best way possible. Hehe, the election will turn out interesting then. > If you look at what I generally do and say in light of the above I think > you won't find many inconsistencies. > > >>>I just humbly wonder why you didn't bother to even *reply* to the survey > >>>emails which AFAIK asked quite a few questions regarding these things. > >> > >>Honestly? Really, there were a couple of things. First, I'm busy. > > > > Too busy to reply and say so? For two weeks? > > More for like eight weeks. And originally, like I was saying I was > planning on writing something back. That was up until the point of > "that" message. You know - *noone* is so busy that it takes 8 weeks to hit reply and type in "I am busy as hell, take a raincheck in 8 weeks?"... well, depending on your typing speed I would estimate it to 10-15 seconds. Probably shorter than the time to actually read the survey - which you did. :) Anyway, I see your apology below so it's fine. > > And what about: > [... snip ...] > > If that question (for example) wasn't about the future then... what? > > Yes, they are. But like I said: > > >>And > >>here, I didn't dare to speak my mind freely - simply because you > >>promised to publish the results and if I would say what the most likely > >>course of action is it would get me even more of a reputation of being > >>an evil guy who wants to prevent everyone from doing anything. So none > >>of this was really appealing to me. > > > > I would like to note that the email said: > > > > "If you wish to give "off the record" feedback you can do so by simply > > separately emailing [hidden email] which > > is the non public mailinglist of the Coordinators." > > Actually, I don't remember this and I probably interpreted that > differently (e.g., as "if you have any OTHER feedback" outside of that > survey). Sorry, my bad. The email can be read in full at: http://swiki.krampe.se/castaways/28 [SNIP] > > Now there you go. I can't judge if my reminders were really *that* > > upsetting, and IMHO the apology was pretty darn clear - but it doesn't > > matter. Fact remains, we got ZERO replies from 5 out of 12 stakeholder > > communities. > > Yes, and? (I'm not sure if you are trying to make an argument here - if > you do, I don't get it) I just mean that I found it quite depressing (lack of responses) and that if this was because I stumbled with the words in the second reminder sent out after 13 days (and then apologized) then I don't think *that* is a fair reason for not giving any reply at all. <rant> Whatever - feel free to hang me out as the bad guy for that single sentence. I mean, hey, it is not like I had *anything* better to do than to hunt down contact persons, explain what we wanted with them, answer questions about that, get confirmations that they wanted the role, craft a survey, get agreement on the survey with the others on the board, send it out, send out a small correction, send out reminders etc etc. Hey, I do that for fun every sunday! Bah. </rant> > > But what is the whole point being a contact person if you don't want to > > communicate with us? Let me quote from the email inviting you to be a > > contact person: > > > [... snip ...] > > > > Now, sure - it says "there are no obligations" but it also clearly says > > that we want to be able to send out questions etc. And no, there is > > nothing forcing you to answer - but IMHO the least we could expect is > > that you bother to reply. > > You know, you're right. I should have sent an email saying "thanks for > sending this, I received it, and I may or may not reply within the time > frame you set". I apologize for not doing that, I will definitely do it > in the future. > > I don't think this would've changed the gist of this discussion (in > which case we would discuss "not answering the questions" instead of > "not answering") but I should've done it nonetheless. Sorry for that. It would have changed quite a lot I can tell you - John replied in exactly that way and fine, what can we do. Hey, this is btw what I sent to John at the time: ------------------------- Hi John! John Maloney <[hidden email]> wrote: > I don't have time to respond. > > -- John Do you wish to respond later? We can always include answers later on - better than not getting them at all. :) Since we will base our course forward on these results the sooner we get them the more likely we will be able to take them into account. Obviously! :) Otherwise feel free to answer "at will" - it still serves a good purpose showing the larger community your specific wants, thoughts and needs. regards, Göran ----------------------------- > Cheers, > - Andreas Cheers, Göran |
In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
> From: [...] [hidden email]
> I am worried about > it getting done at all and I am worried about too few people > showing up to vote. The election will get done - the process is workable. I'm worried about it getting done on time - the team leader hasn't made any announcement on here about the process. I would do so in his stead, but (a) I'm standing as a candidate and (b) I don't want to bypass the communications structure. That said, I *would* recommend that anyone interested in voting either gets an account on SqP or subscribes to one of the mailing lists for Squeak's stakeholder communities... - Peter |
In reply to this post by timrowledge
tim Rowledge wrote:
> Here you are expressing the major problem in a group project- > - You want everything else to stay the same so your massive changes can > go ahead. > - So does everyone else doing any work! > > We simply can't make any useful progress under such conditions. Forward > progress causes breakage and it costs much effort to provide invisible > mogration support. Spending time on that prevents forward progress - > and puts people off ever bothering. I don't believe that is true in general. I agree there are some changes where backward compatibility is very hard (or basically impossible) but for most of the changes that's not true. Generally, I've come to opt for the "parallel subsystem approach" where you don't simply destroy an existing subsystem just because you can but rather create a parallel hierarchy of entities so that both subsystems can be loaded side by side. For example, I hope that if we ever get a new set of Stream/File classes they would be done in a way that the old classes could be loaded and used side-by-side. For example, I hope that if we ever get a new compiler, this would be done in a way that the old compiler can be loaded and used side-by-side. For example, if we ever get a new set of tools, I would hope that... etc. Cheers, - Andreas |
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