Kevin Fenzi <ke...@scrye.com> writes:

> On Sat, Jan 01, 2022 at 12:23:49PM +0100, Dan Čermák wrote:
>> Fabio Valentini <decatho...@gmail.com> writes:
>> 
>> > On Sun, Dec 26, 2021 at 9:09 PM Matthew Miller <mat...@fedoraproject.org> 
>> > wrote:
>> >>
>> >> On Sat, Dec 25, 2021 at 09:15:38PM +0100, Fabio Valentini wrote:
>> >> > So ... maybe we could have a mailing list for this?
>> >> >
>> >> > Maybe "awesome-announce" or "the-new-shinyness" (I'm kidding! I'm bad
>> >> > with names!) at lists.fedoraproject.org, where all Fedora contributors
>> >> > could post the fancy new thing that they just made? Because we
>> >> > definitely don't have a good place for announcements like that right
>> >> > now (the community blog might be the right place for some of those,
>> >> > but it is a higher barrier to actually write a blog post that gets
>> >> > edited etc. instead of writing an e-mail to a mailing list).
>> >>
>> >> Hmmm.
>> >>
>> >> The Community Blog should have a pretty low barrier to entry. Are
>> >> people feeling blocked by that? We should try to adjust if so.
>> >>
>> >> As it is, the bar is basically "is this appropriate for this site" and "is
>> >> the categorization right", with the editorial pass mostly being for
>> >> egregious problems. In other words, I don't think it's actually much more
>> >> heavyweight than a moderated announce mailing list would be.
>> >>
>> >> But I also am not sure Community Blog is the right audience — that's
>> >> intended to be contributor-facing, and this seems like something aimed to 
>> >> e
>> >> more user-facing.
>> >
>> > Those are exactly my thoughts. I don't think there's a way for Fedora
>> > contributors to "market" the cool new thing they've been working on to
>> > *users* (or tech publications)?
>> >
>> > I mean, submitting a Change Proposal results in things getting
>> > announced pretty publicly, but that does not fit for smaller changes,
>> > or changes that are not specific to the next Fedora release.
>> >
>> > I know that some tech news websites follow discussions on the devel
>> > list (and probably the announcement lists), but those are mostly not
>> > really of interest to *users*, and there's no mailing list for "here's
>> > a cool new feature!" that they can subscribe to. That might skew
>> > newsworthy items more towards the "negative news" side of things, like
>> > "this package is orphaned / retired" / "Is this maintainer still
>> > responsive" etc., having more *positive* news to report on would be
>> > nice for Fedora.
>> 
>> So how about we just create such a list, make it moderated, ensure that
>> every post gets at least *some* proofreading and see how it works out?
>
> I'm game... but that brings us to the hardest problem in computers: 
> what do we name it? :) 
>
> new-tech? noteable-changes? new-features?

fedora-contributor-announce?

> And... who will moderate? Perhaps we could/should file a infra ticket on
> the list and have interested parties add their names there?

Sounds good to me.


Cheers,

Dan
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