Le ven. 30 déc. 2011 09:57:45 CET, Andrew Rist <[email protected]> a écrit 
:

This is great stuff - any way this could be posted as a blog post on the main 
AOO blog?

Andrew

Here is a proposal.
___________________________________

The Community Forum: New Year Status

After 4 years of existence, the Community Forum has moved on the ASF servers end of 
October 2011. Here are some figures about how we are doing on the English forum. I 
will try to make this kind of report on a monthly basis in the forum 
(http://user.services.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=46497) but 
not on the blog. This post is just to announce it.

Some history first. To make a long story short: fearing the disappearance of 
the first forum (http://www.oooforum.org) due to spam especially, a group of 
users decided to create a new forum managed by the users themselves. Topics 
about the whole story can be found on both forums. By luck, Sun offered to host 
the forum on their servers in Hamburg (for free) but our independence was part 
of the deal. The forum has been tagged “official” rather wrongly: even if we 
were on Sun then Oracle hardware, they both have never interfered in the 
running of the forum and we are deeply grateful for that.
To manage the forum, a group of Volunteers has been settled. It was first made 
of the users who departed from oooforum (some still contribute to it) and then 
users have been integrated when their contribution showed a true dedication to 
the forum (steady activity and quality of posts). We had a private area (not 
visible by standard users) where the management of the forum could be discussed 
like moderation, forum software features, … So the forum is really managed by a 
group of users helping other users (for free, on their spare time).
Participation is really easy: just register and post your question! (a search 
before is of course welcomed but well, we are prepared to the eternal 
September). A survival guide is available, covering all the basic questions a 
new forum user could have. And if you want to have your say, you can apply for 
the Volunteer status. You can also subscribe to topics (no need to post) to be 
notified when new replies are posted.
Note that the forum has never been a marketing tool. Our target is not to 
promote OOo blindly but to give the best advice as possible to get the users 
out of the trouble he is facing. Therefore, advising to keep other software 
(including proprietary suites) is part of our replies.
The forum is also dedicated to OOo derived products and for them, the only 
limit is the user base visiting the forum. Many of us run LibreOffice in 
parallel for example.
Power users are OOo users like you and me, we usually use one or two components 
much more than the others and we reply with our own experience (trials and a 
kind of reverse engineering sometimes). Some have also great skills for macros 
and give their code snippets (dedicated section). We are from all over the 
world and the success led to the creation of other native language sections.
As you can see, the forum is really a major part of the OOo project. The 
dedication of the helpers has led to a steady rate of the registration as you 
can see below. The figures start at day 1 when the creation of the forum has 
been announced on the mailing list.

Some basics then:
- The number of posts, members and topics is taken from the phpBB information 
bottom of main index page
- Solved topics are counted in all the forums except admin and archives 
sections (not visible to standard users)
Note that the ratio solved topics vs. total topics is slightly biased since the 
topics in the archives and admin sections are counted (in phpBB statistics) but 
not the solved ones (custom search). However, there are less than 550 topics 
there (in more than a 40,000 grand total, so less than 1.5%). These last 
figures shouldn't change very much since the private sections are not very 
active.

Here it is (since the solved topics is a new metric, there is only one point 
for the moment).
[img]http://user.services.openoffice.org/en/forum/download/file.php?id=13066&mode=view[/img]
The blue line (number of posts) is not that important, it just shows that the 
trend is consistent with the other metrics.
The most interesting statistics are the red lines for the members and the 
topics (with triangles, giving the time when the figures have been recorded). 
Note that the ratio topics vs. members is 0.9 for the English forum and above 
1.5 for the French and Japanese forums. We tend not to be too harsh for the 
rules on the English section and topics are not often split when different 
users ask questions (still related of course) in the same thread.

Activity has a slightly higher slope during the first 2 years. It may be linked 
to the building of the knowledge database. Once the main issues and common 
questions have been discussed, users find their answers more and more easily 
with a mere search, hence less topics needed.
Neither the release of LibreOffice (Oct 2010), nor the move to the ASF servers 
(Oct 2011) have changed anything for the activity.

The decrease in the number of members (end of 2011) is linked to the cleaning of banned 
users. They had just been banned until now but to keep only the "real users", 
their account has been deleted (nearly 1800). This was the first cleaning ever done from 
the launch of this forum 4 years ago. 1550 of them had been identified as spammers 
because of their post(s). 250 were passive spam (link in signature or interest field of 
the profile, without any post).

The ratio of the solved topics is rather good: 14,000 solved (green triangle) 
in 41,000 (red triangles), that makes more than 1 in 3 (all users don't bother 
to tag their topic as solved).

For the record, last quarter has been in line with the rest: 2100 new users 
from Oct 1st to end of this year, meaning 1800 new topics.
As for the spam, we have had 1800 users in 1500 days, it makes 1.21 spammer a 
day, still rather low, thanks to the registration process (hard to cheat for 
bots).

Last figures: 2011 has shown an increase in the max number of online users 
along the months. Peak reached 232 beginning of October. The counter has been 
reset on Jan 1st 2012 and is already at 214, proving the audience is still 
there.

Some words about the team. Let's not forget Terry Ellison who was the main 
maintainer of the forum until the move to ASF servers. His huge involvement has 
made it possible for both a clean running of the forum during 4 years, making 
it a great place for those needing/providing help, and contributing to the 
transfer of the forum to the ASF servers with a minimal impact for the users.
As for the Volunteers, 4 new users have been promoted in December 2011 (the 
last approval was in April). Total is nearly 100 now.

To conclude, the constant dedication of the Volunteers shows that they are 
still eager to help users through the forum. We are now waiting for the next 
release of Apache OpenOffice for a new bunch of questions and users...

Hagar Delest,
On the behalf of the Forum Volunteers

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