You're right. This was indeed unnecessary and unproductive.
I apologize.
Claus
--
marketing-list mailing list
marketing-list@gnome.org
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list
This is not a blocker of the new wgo, but still an important issue.
Currently contacting GNOME is difficult for outsiders and even
insiders: we don't provide any email address and we send people to
mailing lists, forums and IRC channels where in fact nobody is
responsible of handling that
If you want to get a visible and explicit responsibility in the
marketing team please add or relocate yourself at
http://live.gnome.org/GnomeMarketing/MarketingTeam - in the area where
you wish to concentrate your effort.
Contributors thinking that they will be active in many areas are still
Website feedback going straight to bugzilla would rock. How about
doing something similar for all contact? This could create a queue of
sorts with feedback that needs to be dealt with. And we can use
bugzilla to handle assigning user feedback, info requests, etc and
ensure nothing falls through
On Mon, Jul 30, 2007 at 09:45:59AM -0400, Patrick Wagstrom wrote:
I'm willing to help out although I've always been very skeptical about
the effectiveness of IRC brainstorming and meeting sessions (I suppose
they're better than mailing lists). Anyway, I've been working on
Same here. What
quote who=Ken VanDine
I would also be in favor of using bugzilla or something similar to
track all marketing tasks. I generally use Jira for this both at work
and for foresight, very useful tool. Bugzilla can do it too, but jira
is designed a little more for managing work flow.
Sysadmin
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Jeff Waugh wrote:
quote who=Ken VanDine
I would also be in favor of using bugzilla or something similar to
track all marketing tasks. I generally use Jira for this both at work
and for foresight, very useful tool. Bugzilla can do it too, but