thanks Rodrigo :  )
--

*Daniel Dias dos Santos*
Java Developer
SouJava & JCP Member
GitHub: https://github.com/Daniel-Dos
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/danieldiasjava
Twitter: http://twitter.com/danieldiasjava


Em sex., 26 de jun. de 2020 às 08:46, Rodrigo Graciano <
[email protected]> escreveu:

> This is huge. Congrats Daniel
>
> > On Jun 26, 2020, at 5:37 AM, Michael Redlich <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Congratulations, Daniel!  This is awesome!
> >
> > Mike.
> >
> >
> >> On Thu, Jun 25, 2020 at 6:47 PM David Blevins <[email protected]>
> >> wrote:
> >>
> >> Dear community,
> >>
> >> Please share your thanks to Daniel Dias Dos Santos who has been invited
> by
> >> the TomEE PMC as a committer!
> >>
> >> Thank you, Daniel, for all you've given the project with your many many
> >> PRs.  You are indeed a big force behind our translation efforts.
> >>
> >> Much more than that, thank you so much for all your effort helping to
> >> enable others to contribute to the project.  It's a rare thing.
> >>
> >> Many people new on an open source project limit their participation.  If
> >> someone asks a question, they think, "Someone who knows more should
> >> probably answer that."  If someone asks how they can help, they think,
> >> "Someone with more authority should probably answer that." If someone
> >> submits a PR, they think, "Someone with more experience/commit should
> >> probably review that."
> >>
> >> Reject that line of thinking.  It doesn't help you or the project.
> >>
> >> The people you view as more capable and with more authority view
> >> themselves as servants.  Servants that are just doing the best they can.
> >> You don't need permission or authority to be a servant.  When you show
> >> willingness and bravery to help others an also be a servant, you quickly
> >> become one of their favorite people.
> >>
> >> The trick; it's not about your ability to help, it's about the person
> who
> >> needs help.  Focus on them, not on you.
> >>
> >> It's not "do I know everything about x", it's "do I know anything about
> x
> >> that can help this person."  If there's any small thing you can do to
> help
> >> them, do it.  If you see they are not getting a response, then you have
> a
> >> wide open range of ways to help them; basically anything that isn't
> >> silence.  Even a simple, "I'm new here too, but happy to team up and
> learn
> >> together.  I can't figure out x, do you have any ideas?"
> >>
> >> Thank you, Daniel, for having the bravery to help so many on the
> project.
> >>
> >> You are now going to cross a magical line were people are going to look
> at
> >> you and think, "we sure, he can help/do/contribute like that because
> he's a
> >> committer.  I'm not so I can't."
> >>
> >> Your new job is to convince them otherwise :)
> >>
> >>
> >> --
> >> David Blevins
> >> http://twitter.com/dblevins
> >> http://www.tomitribe.com
> >>
> >>
> >
> > --
> > *Code*, *Write*, *Cycle*, *Run*, *Drink*,
> > *Sleep ... Repeat*
> >
> > *InfoQ <https://www.infoq.com/> Java Queue Editor*
> > https://about.me/mpredli <http://about.me/mpredli/>
> > https://twitter.com/mpredli
> > https://redlich.net/
> > https://javasig.org/
> > *Laissez Les Bon Temps Rouler*
> > *he/him/his*
>

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