On 10 November 2011 16:42, Ben Coman <[email protected]> wrote:
> Stéphane Ducasse wrote:
>>
>> Hi guys
>> there are plenty of bugs fixes that are waiting for review in the bug
>> tracker. If each of us take two we will
>> get really done fast.
>> So can you give a hand and have a look the fixes.
>>
>> Stef
>>
>>
>
> Thinking ahead to a time when I might contribute to bug fixing, such a call
> to arms makes me wonder if several people might rush to look at the same bug
> I would choose, and fix it while I'm half way through looking at it - thus
> wasting my time.   A bit defeatist I know, but there you go -  btw, how
> people actually dived in?
>

you can always, before actually diving in, leave a comment inside a
particular issue that your are working on it.
you're not forced to put only fixes on issue tracker :)

> I am reminded of what I experience in my busy work setting.  An email "To:"
> multiple people often does not get actioned, while "To:" a single person
> gets actioned more often. It is like people can't help but think that
> someone else is going to do it.  This sparks a thought that something I
> would sign up is to receive an occasional mail out of a random issue to
> individuals.  I might sign up for say one bug a week.  The alternative of
> searching through the issue tracker for suitable material to attack is a bit
> overwhelming.  Getting one occasional email is much less so, with nothing
> lost by ignoring the assigned issue it if it exceeds my skill level.  Then
> that one time I can do a little makes me feel more involved.
>

this doesn't seems realistic.
I certainly not such kind of person, who would do such job: picking
random issue and sending an individual
mail to some random person taken from 'bugfixers list' :)

I think you can do such job pretty easily by youself: open an issue
tracker , close your eyes , randomly move the mouse and then click.
Repeat until you find something,
which you can deal with.

> just some random ideas,
> cheers, BenComan

In practice, if some bug are not fixed within a couple of weeks then
it is not so critical and people can live without it being fixed.
Actually it would be nice to have a bot which automatically closing
unattended issues after month of inactivity, and mark them as 'closed
(unresolved due to inactivity)'.
Because if there's nobody who wants to fix it, why we should keep it listed?


-- 
Best regards,
Igor Stasenko.

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