Hi all, from what I get from the documentation, discourse has a mailing list mode which can, from a end user point of view, be used the same as a mailing list. As in: in a mail client, without additional config that would not be needed with a ML as well.
So assuming we have 1) Sysadmins who are willing to install, configure and host this 2) A migration path for 2a) existing conversations 2b) our mailing lists and, more important, whether public or private and who should be subscribed I don't see why not. If it doesn't have the mailing list mode or if it doesn't work as I suspect it to, I'd be between very hesitant and against it, because I most definitely prefer my e-mail client over yet another crappy web app that is placed in a view and sold as client. If we don't have the migration path I'd be hesitant as well, unless we have a decent solution to - have continuity and not a sudden break / change, as there are ongoing conversations (and running both in parallel is very bad) - make sure we have the manpower and plan to migrate lists and their permissions over Kind regards, Christian PS: on the side discussion of docker: I am not against docker, we use it in (soon to be) production, we orchestrate it with OpenShift. But I do have to say that it is something entirely different and thus needs people willing and able to manage it, and this also needs planning on how to integrate it in already existing infrastructure, also security wise. So if we don't have infra people already comfortable with docker, do plan some extra time to build that up. PPS: I am still not terribly fond of the argumentation "we have to move to $some_fancy_new_shit_software or otherwise people will leave us". If people are contributing to / be with KDE just because of our choice of infra software, we are most definitely doing something wrong. But I already went on about that during the anti-IRC discussion.
