Two things, apologies for the length but I'd **really** appreciate some
feedback (and cc'ing discuss on this):

*1. Workflow (Process, Knowledge-sharing, Etc)
*At the FCsummit, we observed some patterns of behavior for SFC. Chapters
sometimes have a thriving group of folks, and even a whole network in the
case of NYC's FC Coalition. Others seem to be just an individual or maybe a
few folks, friends possibly roped in to working on events or initiatives.
Given the growth of SFC internationally, and the current processes and
interactions taking place as we speak, it seems that SFC, as an
organization, acts like a network of resources, groups, and individuals.
Folks share projects, ask questions, get advice, give feedback, and all
work on awesome things in the Free/Libre Cultural space. From an
organizational standpoint, the incoming board needs to do some hard
thinking and work to update the purpose, mission, and direction of the org
in the FC movement. Functionally, we already see that this is a network of
valuable resources sharing knowledge amongst themselves and with new folks.
Email is the primary conduit by which this sharing takes place. But there
are other options and opportunities out there. We all see how valuable they
could be!

The draft I'm presenting (attached) should be somewhat consistent with
SFC's current behavior patterns, but in order for it (or something like it)
to be effective, we need to get folks in this community on the same page
and commit to putting in a bit of time and investment to make it valuable
for ourselves and for new people joining the FC movement. If we build a
knowledge base, we need to be sure those who could contribute are able to
(they have access) and that information can be organized, and categorized
for intuitive and sufficient discovery (e.g. browse and search). There are
various other constraints, but to me, the most critical change needs to be
social--this community needs to adopt a process for working together
because that's what it does--SFC is all about sharing! ;)

*The workflow - *Work is done by chapters, individuals, the board, and
external contributors. This work can be published anywhere (maybe your
chapter has it's own wiki or blog, awesome!), or it could be unpublished at
this time. At some point, either this work should be posted, in some way,
on the SFC wiki (or at least linked to your chapter's blog for example).
There are two routes. One is to start some email threads with relevant
folks, communicate, and perhaps feedback into the work for some time, but
eventually post to the wiki. The other is to post straight to the wiki,
which can then feedback into further work.

(Question: Does it seem intuitive that information posted on the wiki can
be related to SFC the organization, individual chapters, or Free Culture
itself? Anyone have thoughts about this?)

*2. Github*
Okay, on this note, what email address should I use to set up the github
account?

freeculture is taken, studentsforfreeculture is available, and libreculture
is available.

I think using [email protected] is a security risk since anyone can
sign up for it and we only really need the account to sign up and create a
few repos. Do we have any admin/info accounts for the freeculture.orgdomain?

Repos to create:

FreeCulture.org Wiki
FreeCulture.org Site
FreeCulture.org Support - This may be a convenient place to openly manage
and document work on the site as it exists, then retire it once we move
over to the new site, but it's not totally necessary. Thought it might be
useful for consolidation purposes.

// Matt

On Sat, Apr 28, 2012 at 6:37 PM, Eddie A Tejeda <[email protected]>wrote:

> As long as we use git and publish the source code, the details on host
> don't concern me too much.
>
> Github is nice though!
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Apr 28, 2012, at 8:26 PM, Asheesh Laroia <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> > On Sat, 28 Apr 2012, Alec Story wrote:
> >
> >> I know when we discussed this in the past we favored gitorious because
> it's
> >> open.  Anyone feel strongly about this?
> >
> > I used to be a big Gitorious partisan, but my main project (OpenHatch)
> just switched to Github for the following reasons:
> >
> > * Better bandwidth
> > * More installed user base
> > * "Web hooks" that let you get pinged when the repo changes
> >
> > Full conversation here:
> >
> > * http://lists.openhatch.org/pipermail/devel/2011-November/002521.html
> > * http://lists.openhatch.org/pipermail/devel/2012-February/002658.html
> >
> > Do note that this makes me sad in some ways.
> >
> > -- Asheesh.
> > _______________________________________________
> > Webteam mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > http://lists.freeculture.org/mailman/listinfo/webteam
> _______________________________________________
> Webteam mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.freeculture.org/mailman/listinfo/webteam
>
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