Hi,

I would like to be Mentor for Funded Reviewers. My mission will be:
1)      We are empowered to create a better world together.
2)      Together we co-create our existence.
3)      Together we make Postgresql project a success. 
I am looking for long and fruitful association with Postgresql.

I will require to get training in technical, functional and culture of 
postgresql.

Pl let me know, if you decide positively.

Regards,
Vijay.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Joshua D. Drake" <j...@commandprompt.com>
Date: Thursday, January 27, 2011 2:00 am
Subject: Re: [RRR] [HACKERS] Seeking Mentors for Funded Reviewers
To: Robert Haas <robertmh...@gmail.com>
Cc: Richard Broersma <richard.broer...@gmail.com>, Simon Riggs 
<si...@2ndquadrant.com>, Josh Berkus <j...@agliodbs.com>, 
pgsql-rrreview...@postgresql.org, postgres hackers 
<pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>

> On Wed, 2011-01-26 at 14:15 -0500, Robert Haas wrote:
> > On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 1:32 PM, Richard Broersma
> > <richard.broer...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 3:12 AM, Simon Riggs 
> <si...@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
> > >> You're paying the reviewers; are you paying the mentors?
> > >
> > > The answer to this question is that we can fund mentor 
> (teacher).  However,
> > > the amount to fund a mentor would be significantly less that 
> the amount to
> > > fund a reviewer (student).  The mentors are part of the 
> educational process.
> > 
> > Usually, in an educational process, it's the teachers who get paid,
> > and the students who have to pay to get educated.  I realize 
> this is
> > somewhat different because we want to encourage people to get 
> involved> in the project, but it still seems weird.
> 
> Not somewhat, completely. Most of the "teachers" we have are already
> getting paid to work on PostgreSQL. There are some exceptions of 
> coursebut if you look at the list of people that are qualified to 
> actuallyreview code, they are getting paid *for PostgreSQL*.
> 
> Now, that isn't to say you don't bring up a good point, you do. I 
> thinkit may be worthwhile to find a way to also compensate mentors 
> but as you
> say the goal here is encourage people to get involved. However 
> there is
> the underlying goal of educating future PostgreSQL contributors, and
> let's face it --- reviewing code sucks and money is a great motivator
> (especially in today's economy or if you are a starving student).
> 
> >   And I actually kind of
> > agree with David Fetter.  Aside from the scenario he mentioned 
> (people> who don't get paid stop volunteering, a phenomenon that 
> has been
> > documented to occur in other contexts),
> 
> You have people that are in it for the money. There is nothing wrong
> with that. Hopefully through this grant they will gain enough 
> skill and
> public notice to pick up a job where they might be able to give 
> back to
> the community on a paid basis (probably not, but maybe).
> 
> If people stop volunteering cause there is no money, then we care why?
> They are likely not vested in the community anyway. Either way, the
> mission has been accomplished. They were paid to be educated and learn
> the review/commitfest process, they did so. If they wish to move on,
> that's up to them.
> 
> Do we want them to stay? Of course! However, I fail how to see the
> concern has anything to do with the grant process.
> 
> >  there's also the problem that
> > people might sign up to get the money but then do a lousy job. 
> 
> Well that is the risk we all face and if the mentor feedback was that
> the person did a lousy job (let's assume they were just lazy, not that
> they tried really hard but weren't up to the task), then they 
> would risk
> ever receiving future grants.
> 
> >  People
> > sometimes do a lousy job now too, but at least we can count on the
> > fact that everyone who signs up to do it has some intrinsic
> > motivation.
> 
> I think anyone who is going to make it through a grant process
> specifically for this purpose is going to have some intrinsic 
> motivationbeyond money. We aren't talking about shelling out 50k here.
> 
> Sincerely,
> 
> Joshua D. Drake
> 
> -- 
> PostgreSQL.org Major Contributor
> Command Prompt, Inc: http://www.commandprompt.com/ - 509.416.6579
> Consulting, Training, Support, Custom Development, Engineering
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> 
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