On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 at 14:52, Sumana Harihareswara <s...@changeset.nyc> wrote:

> On 7/29/20 10:14 PM, Jeremy Stanley wrote:
> > On 2020-07-30 07:17:03 +0530 (+0530), Pradyun Gedam wrote:
> >> TL;DR: OK to archive this mailing list? Reply by Aug 30th.
> > [...]
> >
> > I find it disappointing that there will no longer be a mailing list
> > for discussions of Python packaging. Web forums with some E-mail
> > integration are hardly the same. But those of us who still use
> > E-mail (and worse, Usenet) eventually need to get out of the way of
> > the wheels of progress lest they run us over.
> >
> > Many thanks to those who have maintained, moderated, and
> > collaborated through this list over the years. It has been much
> > appreciated.
>
> Jeremy, I'm not sure whether you were serious? If your disappointment is
> only out of nostalgia, then yeah, accepting change makes sense. But if
> your disappointment is because the Discourse experience is/will be worse
> for your participation, then it's totally fine to speak up and tell us how.
>

Discourse requires about 10x the effort to participate in the community.
It's "mailing list mode" sends garbled fragments of interwoved WYSIWYG
documents that are unintelligible - I tried it for some months when the
Pyython Discourse started up but had to turn it off after a while as I
really couldn't effectively tell what was being said in a conversation that
comes in via it.

And its so siloed, I may as well not be in the conversation at all: I have
to actively go and log into the website to look and see what new
conversations are happening, which in my time poor situation just doesn't
happen. So, for all intents and purposes, I'm not participating in any
conversation in Discourse at all, except for a rare helicopter drop-in when
someone pings me on email or Twitter or Slack or Discord to say 'hey, you
should comment on <URL>'.

I full well recognise the advantage that these properties have when dealing
with a bulk of (largely) newcomers whose community use case is to sample
discussion: to find one or two things that have been said previously via
search, ask some questions to get a problem solved, and then move on.

Relatively few of those users will be publishing packages though; even with
the rise of docker : consuming Python in a local script or workbook is
still the majority use case I think, so the bulk of the work we do affects
a (large) fraction of users, and most of those users are experienced by the
time they need our assistance.

Pradyun, thanks for starting this conversation.
>
> I am definitely interested in consolidating our conversational channels
> and reducing fragmentation, but I have substantial reservations about
> taking this particular step:
>
> * The majority of information overwhelm in my PyPA-related life is
> because of GitHub repo and issue sprawl -- if we're going to put energy
> into pruning sprawling communications venues, I would prefer that we
> spend some time inventorying all the teams, shutting some down, and
> locking noisy issues/repositories.
>

Agreed with the above.


> * I would like to know, of our ~700 list members, how many of them have
> serious problems using Discourse -- accessibility, user experience,
> sheer tech problems, etc. I suspect that we have several members in that
> category, some who contribute to packaging, some who lurk so they can
> stay apprised and bridge to other communities (distributions, major
> packages, etc.).
>

I have contributed a fair degree in the past; I'm largely if not entirely
emeritus at this point - I get to code only from time to time in my day
job, and then it is rarely Python. I like to stay in touch, both because I
can provide some institutional continuity, but also I do enjoy helping from
time to time, when I can.

I hope these thoughts are useful.

-Rob

On Discourse I've seen
> https://discuss.python.org/t/disappointed-and-overwhelmed-by-discourse/982
> , https://discuss.python.org/t/if-mailing-list-mode-were-better/3951 ,
> and https://discuss.python.org/t/e-mail-settings-are-not-respected/396
> talking about problems people have had keeping up with/watching and
> participating in conversations on Discourse -- including Paul Moore and
> Paul Ganssle, whose opinions I really want to hear from here. I believe
> I've heard Dan Ryan say that he finds Discourse practically unusable,
> and I'd like to hear from him as well.
>
> * There are some things I don't like about how Discourse shapes our
> conversations. Some examples: I think people are chattier on Discourse,
> posting shorter replies more frequently, and that's not always good. In
> the email notifications, Discourse preserves threading so I can see
> better who's replying to whom, but the web view is flat which makes that
> harder to see. And -- as came up in
>
> https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-458-secure-pypi-downloads-with-package-signing/2648/30
> -- people use the heart/"like" button in different ways that have led to
> confusion. “Liking” a post on Discourse does not have clear semantics.
> It could mean “I like how you expressed this” or “I’m glad you spoke” or
> “welcome” or “yes, please do the things you have proposed, I approve"
> and there's no way of telling without explicit explanation.
>
> * Discourse is written in Ruby and I have rarely seen Discourse
> developers interact with us, and I don't believe I've ever seen (in the
> "Discourse feedback" threads above) any Python community member saying
> that they could try to fix a problem we were seeing with Discourse. The
> more we lock in to using Discourse and moving away from Mailman --
> written in Python 3 and now with a web frontend that includes search,
> posting, and threaded archive views -- the more we give up control of
> our tools.
>
> What if we bridged them, instead? Barry Warsaw in
>
> https://discuss.python.org/t/disappointed-and-overwhelmed-by-discourse/982/15
> suggested:
>
> > My ultimate dream would be to add an IMAP and/or NNTP interface directly
> to [Mailman 3/HyperKitty]. Then I could use my normal mail application to
> catch up and interact with Mailman lists in a very lightweight way, driven
> entirely by my own workflow. That plus a Discourse bridge would be a pretty
> powerful and flexible combination.
>
> Is that something that other folks here who have trouble with Discourse
> would find fruitful? If so, we can start pushing to make it happen.
>
> --
> Sumana Harihareswara
> Changeset Consulting
> https://changeset.nyc
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