On 8/26/05, Julien Gilli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 8/26/05, Luis Villa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Anyone else interested in splitting these? > > I am, can you send me all the required information to work on this please ?
Since there are two of you, I'd suggest: Tthe two of you split the list somehow (maybe just first six, last six?) and agree on a list of questions. The obvious questions I'd suggest would be: * 'does the project still match the initial plan? why or why not?' Don't ask about what the project is; you already know that from the wiki, so you can summarize that yourselves. * 'did you enjoy the summer?' * 'will you keep hacking on this project or GNOME after this is done?' * 'any funny or interesting anecdotes?' Then email the hackers (maybe cc'ing their mentors and me?) and wait 24-48 hours for responses, nagging them after that, and then start writing. Sound reasonable to you too? Keep in mind the size limit Claus mentioned- if we end up with 10 of these, none can be longer than 150-200 words (keeping in mind the need to write an introduction) unless you work with the g-j folks to split it up somehow. Also, both of you will have some hackers who don't respond to the emails (still waiting for seth or jrb to give us a ballpark as to how many people this might be). There is at least one person who has emailed me privately suggesting that there were non-GNOME-sponsored projects that are still relevant (in this case language bindings), so if you find that several of your people aren't responding, let me know and I can put you in touch with this not-GNOME-sponsored-but-basically-GNOME-anyway summer hacker :) Is that clear? Let me know- Luis -- marketing-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list
