[Foundation-l] The $1.7 million question

2009-09-15 Thread Gregory Kohs
So, let me just get this straight.

Someone here bemoaned the fact that a full history dump of the English
Wikipedia has been sought for 3 years, but is still forthcoming.  That
person mentioned, factually, that $1.7 million of budgeted money for
technology was left unspent, with the suggestion that perhaps a portion of
this money could have been directed to a contractor who would have been
charged with crafting a successful full history dump.  This budgetary fact
was disdainfully questioned and the troll insult was whipped out with
haste.  The financial fact was then supported with a report from this very
Foundation's Executive Director.  The response then was that one could care
less about what Sue Gardner has to say about budget.  Then, the initial
person offered that minimum wage plus $80 daily child care would buy his
solution to a full history dump.

Now, assuming this might mean 8 working weeks of labor for this guy, that
would be ($400 child-care + $280 wage) x 8 weeks = $5,440.

This sum is approximately three-tenths of ONE PERCENT of the budgeted money
that was instead stored in the bank and set aside for some future staffing
and technology needs.

But the person(s) making the factual statements, backing them up with
referenced sources, and offering a potential eight-week solution to a
three-year-old problem, at a cost of 3/10th of 1% of the allocated budget to
problems exactly like this... IS REWARDED WITH THE TROLL epithet?

Do I have that correct?  Because if I do, then I am beginning to see why so
many people suggest that there is a serious freakin' PROBLEM with the tone
of discourse on this mailing list.

Let me recommend something.  Pay Anthony Dipierro the sum of $5,500, give
him server access, give him eight weeks, and if he doesn't produce a full
history dump of the English Wikipedia, then perhaps his penance could be a
one-year ban from Wikimedia mailing lists?  That would make a lot of troll
spotters here quite happy, I'm sure.  What do you have to lose?  (Other
than three-tenths of one percent of the 2007 technology budget, that is.)

-- 
Gregory Kohs
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Re: [Foundation-l] The $1.7 million question

2009-09-15 Thread Anthony
On Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 10:12 PM, Gregory Kohs thekoh...@gmail.com wrote:

 Let me recommend something.  Pay Anthony Dipierro the sum of $5,500, give
 him server access, give him eight weeks, and if he doesn't produce a full
 history dump of the English Wikipedia, then perhaps his penance could be a
 one-year ban from Wikimedia mailing lists?


That's a bit presumptuous of you, Greg.
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Re: [Foundation-l] The $1.7 million question

2009-09-15 Thread John Vandenberg
On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 12:20 PM, Anthony wikim...@inbox.org wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 10:12 PM, Gregory Kohs thekoh...@gmail.com wrote:

 Let me recommend something.  Pay Anthony Dipierro the sum of $5,500, give
 him server access, give him eight weeks, and if he doesn't produce a full
 history dump of the English Wikipedia, then perhaps his penance could be a
 one-year ban from Wikimedia mailing lists?


 That's a bit presumptuous of you, Greg.

I don't know the background of this, so I don't understand why this
would be presumptuous of Greg.

The key question is whether the full history dump was ever considered
to be a project that needs WMF funding to be allocated, as opposed to
letting it be solved by the normal open source model.

Lots of people complain about the full history dump, but what
importance has the WMF put on it, comparatively to other needs?  How
are these WMF software projects managed?  Does Brion report yearly on
key infrastructure and software dev objectives each year?

While Gregs recommendation to have WMF grant to develop certain
functionality, I would prefer that WMF offers bounties.

I've just noticed that bounties are mentioned on this strategy proposal.

https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/strategy/wiki/Proposal:Track_bugs_in_other_projects_impeding_our_progress

--
John Vandenberg

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Re: [Foundation-l] The $1.7 million question

2009-09-15 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 10:47 PM, John Vandenberg jay...@gmail.com wrote:
[snip]
 The key question is whether the full history dump was ever considered
 to be a project that needs WMF funding to be allocated, as opposed to
 letting it be solved by the normal open source model.

Post the root password to the database servers and I'm sure that there
will be no more dump problems.

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Re: [Foundation-l] The $1.7 million question

2009-09-15 Thread Anthony
On Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 10:47 PM, John Vandenberg jay...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 12:20 PM, Anthony wikim...@inbox.org wrote:
  On Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 10:12 PM, Gregory Kohs thekoh...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 
  Let me recommend something.  Pay Anthony Dipierro the sum of $5,500,
 give
  him server access, give him eight weeks, and if he doesn't produce a
 full
  history dump of the English Wikipedia, then perhaps his penance could be
 a
  one-year ban from Wikimedia mailing lists?
 
 
  That's a bit presumptuous of you, Greg.

 I don't know the background of this, so I don't understand why this
 would be presumptuous of Greg.


I never said I could do this in eight weeks, I never offered a penance of
a one-year ban if I fail, and I certainly never committed to 40 hours a
week.  The penance especially doesn't make sense.  The WMF can ban me for
free if they want to.

While Gregs recommendation to have WMF grant to develop certain
 functionality, I would prefer that WMF offers bounties.


It's not clear to me how a bounty for developing functionality would work,
especially not for something complicated like fixing the dump system.  A
contracted out service as opposed to a per-hour rate, sure.  But a bounty?

I've just noticed that bounties are mentioned on this strategy proposal.

 https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/strategy/wiki/
 Proposal:Track_bugs_in_other_projects_impeding_our_progress


A bug bounty is generally given for finding a bug, not for fixing it.
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Re: [Foundation-l] The $1.7 million question

2009-09-15 Thread Geoffrey Plourde
While I like the idea of bounties, this idea actually has merit. To make him 
work, I would give him the amount of money for childcare as a down payment, 
with the wages payable on delivery. Can someone from the Foundation look into 
this? We have quite a few talented mooks, who might be able to handle other 
miscellaneous projects, freeing up Brion and the crew both from tantrums about 
non completed requests and minor work.





From: Gregory Kohs thekoh...@gmail.com
To: foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 7:12:48 PM
Subject: [Foundation-l] The $1.7 million question

So, let me just get this straight.

Someone here bemoaned the fact that a full history dump of the English
Wikipedia has been sought for 3 years, but is still forthcoming.  That
person mentioned, factually, that $1.7 million of budgeted money for
technology was left unspent, with the suggestion that perhaps a portion of
this money could have been directed to a contractor who would have been
charged with crafting a successful full history dump.  This budgetary fact
was disdainfully questioned and the troll insult was whipped out with
haste.  The financial fact was then supported with a report from this very
Foundation's Executive Director.  The response then was that one could care
less about what Sue Gardner has to say about budget.  Then, the initial
person offered that minimum wage plus $80 daily child care would buy his
solution to a full history dump.

Now, assuming this might mean 8 working weeks of labor for this guy, that
would be ($400 child-care + $280 wage) x 8 weeks = $5,440.

This sum is approximately three-tenths of ONE PERCENT of the budgeted money
that was instead stored in the bank and set aside for some future staffing
and technology needs.

But the person(s) making the factual statements, backing them up with
referenced sources, and offering a potential eight-week solution to a
three-year-old problem, at a cost of 3/10th of 1% of the allocated budget to
problems exactly like this... IS REWARDED WITH THE TROLL epithet?

Do I have that correct?  Because if I do, then I am beginning to see why so
many people suggest that there is a serious freakin' PROBLEM with the tone
of discourse on this mailing list.

Let me recommend something.  Pay Anthony Dipierro the sum of $5,500, give
him server access, give him eight weeks, and if he doesn't produce a full
history dump of the English Wikipedia, then perhaps his penance could be a
one-year ban from Wikimedia mailing lists?  That would make a lot of troll
spotters here quite happy, I'm sure.  What do you have to lose?  (Other
than three-tenths of one percent of the 2007 technology budget, that is.)

-- 
Gregory Kohs
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