Dave, you took the words right out of my mouth.... (Well except for
that .NET part.... ;) )

-matt

On 6/21/06, Dave Wagner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
"We could be offending people by holding a courteous discussion!". We could
also be offending people because were Mormon, does that stop us?

I have to disagree, ofcourse by doing so I may be accused of trolling for a
flame war but ohwell. Most of your list falls squarely under your broad
mission statement, "The purpose of LDS OSS is to help advance God's purposes
using our knowledge of technology and science. We strive to do this in
harmony with the teachings and wishes of the leadership of The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints." Unfortunatly most of those things you
feel should not be discussed deal, either directly or indirectly, with our
knowledge of technology and science. I am reminded of the founding of this
nation, not everyone agreed on a single definition of freedom and it took
years just to hammer out a common definition, then we started working on who
was included, etc. My point is that by debating, in a civil manner, issues
that affect our craft, in this case open source software (which is very
broad), we can move closer to a more common ground and in turn faster and
more frequent advances in our technology and knowledge. I don't know about
all of you but in my priesthood class we choose a topic and debate it in a
reverent manner until we can, for the most part, agree on it's meaning in a
phylisophical sense.

"I think others feel similarly.  Some developers apparently feel they can't
participate unless the software is in .Net." Being that only two of us on
this mailing list (that I can recall) have given any mention to .NET taking
a pro stance, it is fairly easy to track down our comments on this matter.
With that said, I can not find anywhere in the records where either of us
said that we felt we could not participate unless it was done in .NET or any
other language or platform for that matter. Infact, I found quite the
contrary, as I recall, both of us mentioned that while we prefer programming
in .NET we feel there are valid uses for all programming technologies and
both of the major platforms.

"These aren't hard rules, and I think we'll be judged less by whether we
adhere to the rules and more by how we avoid conflicts." I think this would
be a much more appropriate to concentrate on rather than the actual topic of
the discussion at hand (unless the topic is wildly off-topic like political
discussion).

"Users of operating systems.  No one should assume that users of a
particular OS have particular aptitudes." and "It's OK to say
that a lot of people who don't know a lot about computers run Windows."
Perhaps I'm not following that email properly but this sounds fairly
contradictory. I think the first statement is correct, stereotypes should be
avoided, afterall, I reall dislike it when someone finds out I'm a Mormon
and asks me where my other wife is.

Perhaps I am too accustomed to living in the US and the kind of democracy we
have come to enjoy though. I just hate to see censorship being used as a
means to avoid conflict, it merely represses issues, not addresses them.
Also, I would rather enjoy being able to finish the other discussion in a
civil manner. I really feel a need to understand why it seems the majority
of this list is so dismissive of apposing points of view (as far as
programming matters go). It's the same reason I stopped responding to this
list so many months ago and it's only being validated now.

Nonetheless I think I am going to shrink off into the dark and just keep
reading this list hoping someday I may be of help to someone here.


On 6/20/06, Shane Hathaway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
 Thomas Haws and I had a short private exchange about the Linux vs.
Windows thread, which I've attached with his permission.

A lot of us are enthusiastic about building open source software that
fits with our faith and convictions.  Unfortunately, we're getting a
little distracted.  We (myself included) need to recognize that while
our purpose is the same, our backgrounds and skills are quite different,
and it is unrealistic to believe that we can resolve our differences here.

Therefore, I'd like to suggest certain topics should not be discussed on
this list.  Even if we are able to maintain complete courtesy as we
discuss conflicting viewpoints, some people don't follow the threads
closely and to them it looks like an unprofessional flood of email about
topics not related to this list.

We could be offending people by holding a courteous discussion!  That
phenomenon is a strange but consistent outgrowth of mailing lists.
People not accustomed to the art of discussing things on mailing lists
don't understand it and it troubles them.

We really don't want newcomers to feel offended, so we need to stay
focused.  As for myself, in the future I'm going to pretend that when I
post on this list, I'm going into a church for a quorum meeting.  It's
true that conflicting viewpoints occur in quorum meetings, but smart
participants quietly stay out and smart leaders gently defer the
discussions.

We are likely to run into some of the following topics on a regular
basis, and I suggest they should always be deferred to other discussion
areas (personal blogs would be a good choice):

- Which operating system is best.
- Which programming language or framework is best.
- The aptitude and skills of people using particular operating systems.
- The aptitude and skills of people using particular programming
languages and frameworks.
- The practices of controversial vendors/employers like Microsoft and SCO.
- Tabs vs. spaces.
- Emacs vs. Vi.
- IDEs vs. text editors.
- Static vs. dynamic typing.
- Coding style standards.
- SQL naming styles.
- RDBMS vs. OODBMS.
- When to use XML.
- When to use AJAX.
- Web services vs. REST.
- Centralized vs. decentralized architecture.
- GPL vs. BSD licensing (which is more Free?)
- The correct interpretation of copyright licenses.
- The patent system.
- What constitutes a usable user interface.
- The trustworthiness of Wikipedia and other online sources.
- Current political topics like global warming, the current president,
the war, illegal aliens, gas prices, etc.
- Top-posting, bottom-posting, excessive quoting, and other email
quoting styles.  Because we have newcomers here, every popular email
style should be acceptable.
- Reply-To header munging and related mailing list administration.
- Mysterious doctrinal questions like the Church's stance on evolution.

I'm basing this list on subjects I've observed in other groups that
invariably lead to conflicts.  Do I need to clarify any of these?  Did I
miss some?  These aren't hard rules, and I think we'll be judged less by
whether we adhere to the rules and more by how we avoid conflicts.  I
apologize for involving myself in a few of them.  (I need to blog more
often so I don't feel the need to post my opinion where it doesn't belong!)

There's also the ever-present meta-topic, discussion about discussion.
I'm engaging in that right now.  It's not possible to eliminate it, but
we can reduce its flow.  Let's not do it much.

I hope no one feels discouraged just because we got a little distracted.
 Consider the process of building a temple: you start with the same raw
materials that you'd use to build any other kind of building, but the
result is different because the goal is different.  We're still building
this little organization and learning how to build it the right way.  At
first, the organization might look like any other, but in time, we'll
end up with something special.

Open source developers often don't mind a little distracting conflict
because it helps them learn, open up, and get to know each other.  But
this is not a typical group of open source developers, so I think we
have to forgo certain discussions on this list.  In its place, we have a
common faith and testimony, and that's going to take us further than
distracting conflicts would.

Shane



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Shane Hathaway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Thomas Haws <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 19 Jun 2006 14:18:57 -0600
Subject: Re: [Ldsoss] Linux and Windows--How wide the divide
Thomas Haws wrote:
> Is there anything I can do to pen this contention monster I unleashed
> with my thread?  I feel terrible seeing the discussion deteriorate into
> a "friendly" but wasteful partisan banter that is filling up inboxes and
> looking bad.

I may be partly to blame, since I've wanted to participate in
LDS-specific open source projects for years now, yet I can't
realistically participate in any project that's not cross-platform.  My
desire to participate may be overwhelming my judgment.

I think others feel similarly.  Some developers apparently feel they
can't participate unless the software is in .Net.

Obviously we could all build separate things that have no interaction
with each other, but IMHO that's what we're all doing already.  We want
to build something together.  It's also unrealistic to believe we can
all choose the same technologies or participate in the same project.

Perhaps we just need to make some ground rules.  This group is about LDS
and open source.  It is not about:

- The choice of operating system.  This issue is as charged as the
divide between capitalism and socialism that exists even within the
church membership.  Discussions about which OS is better should be taken
off the list immediately.

- Users of operating systems.  No one should assume that users of a
particular OS have particular aptitudes.

- Controversial vendors like Microsoft.

These shouldn't be hard rules.  It's OK to say that some software has a
good chance of being useful for building the kingdom.  It's OK to say
that a lot of people who don't know a lot about computers run Windows.
It's OK to say that Microsoft Windows Vista is going to have some
feature that will directly benefit this group.

Shane



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