Comments below

On May 4, 2011, at 8:48 AM, Jordan Rinke wrote:

> Because there is still debate over a forum or a QnA site I will wait to see 
> what the decision is tomorrow before making any demo sites for review. The 
> problem still is that the QnA solves a different issue, it provides a means 
> to answer very specific questions not a realm for discussion. A user forum 
> allows people to ask questions which require discussion and may have various 
> trade offs. Not just "how do I get a list of all running instances using the 
> euca2ools" which would be a great QnA question but questions like "How do I 
> HA my mySQL DB for Nova" a question that will involve discussion, multiple 
> potential answers based on their configuration and have trade offs depending 
> on what they are wanting. There will be no specifically right answer. I think 
> a number of people are failing to fully understand that not everyone is a 
> developer and not everyone has the understanding to ask a very specific and 
> provably solved question, and that not all questions are even specifically 
> solvable but that the discussion around those provides valuable information 
> for the community.

As an avid user of QnA sites, I think they actually solve general questions 
very well.  Examples:

http://serverfault.com/questions/3780/useful-command-line-commands-on-windows
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14967/c-coding-standard-best-practices

It still allows for discussions (see the back and forth in comments on posts), 
but still allows good responses to rise to the top.  I find this far easier 
than scrolling through 10+ pages of discussion to find relevant issues.

Administrators can convert popular questions into "community wiki" and allow 
them to be collaboratively edited more easily.

> 
> A QnA site is basically an evolution of the mailing list which makes it 
> fairly obvious that everyone who loves the ML loves the QnA it is an 
> extension of the same concept but it is to narrow to accept the user 
> community as a whole.

I don't think this is accurate.  The mailing list forces people to search 
inefficiently for answers just like a forum.  QnA would be more of a 
replacement for the Answers section on launchpad.

> 
> For a moment, stop thinking as someone who has experience (possibly in depth 
> developer experience) with OpenStack and think like someone who has heard a 
> little about it, wants to talk to someone about the test install the are 
> attempting to run but doesn't know how to go about it. If we want mass 
> adoption we need to provide a welcome area for this type of discussion. We 
> can develop the best software in the world but if we don't make it easy for 
> people to use and understand and discuss it is useless. We should be doing 
> everything we can to make the community as accepting of new members as 
> possible and I think a forum is very much so one of those methods.

This is the real value of a forum, the feeling of community that it provides.  
The common memes that are shared by forum members and the semi-off-topic back 
and forth is fantastic. Forums are great for these things, but for actual 
access to information, QnA sites basically win.  Having a forum for community 
building is fine, but if our goal is really solving user's problems, I think we 
definitely need a good QnA site.

> 
> I am not even saying that the Qna needs to be exclusive, we can have both if 
> that seems right... I don't know at what point we decided they were mutually 
> exclusive.

Both seems fine to me, I only worry that we will have too many places that 
people are asking questions and not enough people answering them.

> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "Vishvananda Ishaya" <vishvana...@gmail.com>
> Sent: Wednesday, May 4, 2011 11:15am
> To: openstack@lists.launchpad.net
> Subject: [SPAM] Re: [Openstack] Creating a forum
> 
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> A few people have mentioned the stack exchange style idea.  I think this is a 
> fantastic idea; StackOverflow, etc. has been extremely useful to me. Since it 
> is free to host a subdomain on StackExchange if there is enough support, we 
> might as well get the ball rolling in addition.  This could replace or be in 
> addition to a forum.
> 
> Note that this is not any kind of "official" decision to use Stack Exchange, 
> but if we want to leave ourselves the opportunity to use it we need to get it 
> started soon because it will likely take a couple of weeks.  I went ahead and 
> proposed it here:
> 
> http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/31788/openstack
> 
> if this seems like a good idea to you, follow it and create and vote on 
> example questions.  It would start as a community site. If there is enough 
> support on the site we can decide (with the ppb) whether we want it to be an 
> "official" channel.
> 
> Vish
> 

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