Hi Joe,

Don't hesitate to ping me on the ASF slack channel if you need to discuss the content of this article.

When the content looks good to you, we will publish on the Success at Apache blog and then I'll link to my personal blog.

Best

Etienne

Le 10/03/2022 à 15:22, Etienne Chauchot a écrit :

Hi Joe,

Here is draft that I've promised. Can you please review it and tell me if I can post it in "Success at Apache" and in my personnal blog also (through a link to the ASF) .

Best

Etienne

title: *My experience with the Apache Way: a perfect society ?*

*
*

🕥 7 min.


    Introducion

I have been working in software engineering for more than 15 years. I've always contributed to Open Source software as a user or a coder. But I've been contributing toASF <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>projects such asApache Flink <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>,Apache Beam <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>orApache Spark <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#> for nearly 6 years. It is long enough for me to say that I find*the Apache Way* is almost the best way to collaborate on software engineering.

I will not describe the Apache way here as there are a lot of good content about that already. I will rather link tothe official Apache documentation <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>. I humbly suggest that you read what it is if you don't know it already.

My point here is to describe the consequences of the Apache Way as I see them. Of course, every Apache community is different, but what I wanted to emphasize is that applying the Apache Way by the book could lead to what I'd call a "perfect society" even if this word seems a bit naive and over optimistic or even utopian.


    A perfect society


/Actually, working with the Apache way was a revelation to me !/

The Apache Way leads in many ways to Open Source Communities behave like a sort of perfect society:

The community is governed by merit: everything is about what you do inside the community and at some point your efforts are noted and you get credit for your work by obtaining more rights (direct access to the project repositories, election ofcommitters <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>etc..). Merit also drives decisions, discussing solutions and voting for the best one leads to the best possible state of the project in the end. The best idea always wins in the long term.

    The software is not driven by money: no private concerns should take over. When the incubation process is well advanced, before graduation, theASF bord <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>makes sure that the aspiring community is well developed (users and developers communities are big enough), healthy and also not owned by a single company and its private financial considerations. This ensures best decisions for the software itself but also a long term maintenance of the software.

It is inclusive: every voice matters, everyone is considered equal no matter your personal background, your education, ethnic or nationality, every contribution is good to take. Community members recognize that people skills may be different and complementary to theirs. So contributions might come from anyone, from anywhere and in any form (blog post, documentation, talk, code, website...)

Communities are welcoming: they always search for new talents to join their forces. Be welcoming is always very important to build and grow a community. The Open Source community is also a great place for people to grow. The way people collaborate is generally by mentoring. Experienced contributors help new comers or experts share their thoughts with others. It is really also a good way for mentors to share their passion and inspire mentorees. Mentoring is even in the DNA of the ASF starting withthe incubator <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#> when the podling community profits from the experience and advice of a mentor to grow in the Apache Way and become atop level project <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>.

    Communities are self-organised: there is no manager but only technical leaders and mentors. People are self-motivated and I must say that it is the best form of motivation ever! Decision making is both simple and efficient: there is no solely decision, feedback is always very important. People are willing to share their thoughts and solve the problems together.

Community members are always benevolent: they are always willing to share their thoughts, review PRs, share advice, accept change requests or bug tickets. People are wiling to accept criticism without being defensive. The master word is transparency.

    Last but not least, people behave friendly: public communication (one of the ASF master words is "what did not happen publicly never happened") forces people to communicate in a positive way: for example by asking questions or suggesting rather than affirming or asking for thoughts rather than disagreeing bluntly. An Open Source contributor always tries to put himself in the other person's shoes, trying to not hurt his feelings and to not demotivate him.

=> Considering all of this, what I can tell is that it is the way we all would like people and society in
general to behave, no ?


    Daily life


The funny thing is that it goes even further, after some years of applying this philosophy (I was told lately that it felt almost like a religion 😄) at work on a full time basis, you start applying it to daily life outside of work. It becomes your standard way of behaving in society: meritocracy becomes a second nature, for example you reward your home builders with gifts and public credit because they did a good job, you reward your kids for good school work etc... You also start to give time to others and share your knowledge, mentoring becomes a second nature.Another big thing which is very visible is that you now always take good care to give positive communication, leading to positive and constructive thinking. Positivism also becomes a second nature.

    On a professional basis, an important thing is that merit never expires. So, if you gain committership on a project, or become aPMC member <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>or even anASF member <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#>, it is for life ! So your skills are recognized by your pairs for your whole career. This is an incredible credit and a tremendous trust mark !


    Can be a bit challenging


In order to avoid being seen as a total idealist 😉, I need to temper a bit:

I remember when I first joined an Open Source community, I felt intimidated. Community members are generally very senior level and very high skilled developers. But, remember what is written above: every contribution is good to take. And, with time and mentoring, everyone deserves his place inside the community.

    The other thing I felt a bit difficult when I joined is to find where to start: some projects are old enough to have a large community so the amount of code is pretty high. But here again mentoring comes into play: mentors can give you pointers on hot topics, starter tickets or simply areas that need maintenance. And within time, you'll be recognized as an expert in a given area and the exciting subjects will come to you. And if you feel like you want to join a smaller community try joining a project which is still in the incubator <https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1438124655819523792/141840252120770949#> phase !


    Conclusion


I hope you enjoyed these insights and I hope it gave you the envy to join a Open Source community.




Le 25/02/2022 à 09:38, Etienne Chauchot a écrit :

Hi Joe,

Thanks for your answer and your views !

Yes, I'll send a draft webpage here before publishing. Then, after review, we could publish to the ASF blog in "Success at Apache" and I can definitely link to the ASF blog post in my personal blog so that there is only one publishing place.

Regarding the Apache Way, I mentioned it only for new comers to be informed, but I totally agree, it would be redundant. So I propose that we just link an article about the Apache Way at the beginning of my article. Do you have a good link to send me ?

I'll then describe my experience in the continuation of the article, that was indeed the whole point of the article !

WDYT ?

Thanks.

Etienne.

Le 18/02/2022 à 19:23, Joe Brockmeier a écrit :
Hi Etienne,

Sorry for the delayed response - missed this the first go-around.

Can you shoot a draft *before* posting to your site? Ideally we'd post in one place. If not we can always promote it on Twitter and LinkedIn.

From the initial email, though - I'd steer away from describing "The Apache Way" and focus on your experience instead. The Apache Way has been covered, at length, already. I'd focus on what your success looks like.

Describing how The Apache Way has informed your success would be great.

Thanks!

jzb

On Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 4:52 AM Etienne Chauchot <echauc...@apache.org> wrote:

    Hi Bertrand!

    Thanks. I totally agree. I'll post on my personal blog post and
    send a
    link here.

    Best

    Etienne Chauchot

    Le 18/02/2022 à 10:48, Bertrand Delacretaz a écrit :
    > Hi Etienne,
    >
    > Le ven. 18 févr. 2022 à 10:43, Etienne Chauchot
    <echauc...@apache.org> a écrit :
    >> ...Any news about this proposal ? Can I start writing the
    blog post ? ...
    > I don't have decision power on what's published in "Success at
    Apache"
    > but I'd say go for it!
    >
    > An actual draft is IMO the best way to convince people, and if
    they're
    > not convinced there's lots of other places where you can post.
    >
    > -Bertrand



--
Joe Brockmeier
Vice President Marketing & Publicity
j...@apache.org

Reply via email to