Re: [Wikitech-l] [Mediawiki-enterprise] MediaWiki for the third party community: get involved!

2014-08-04 Thread Isarra Yos

Hi,

What would be the purpose of this organisation and separate community, 
exactly? Has there been any demonstrated need or even want for such an 
organisation amongst the community it would proportedly serve?


I ask in particular because as a third-party sysadmin myself, it's hard 
enough following all the relevant discussion and information that 
concerns releases as it is already. Adding another organisation on top 
of that, with its own lists and websites to check and follow, and 
another layer of community to go through to get things upstreamed, seems 
highly premature when we can't even consolidate the basics (release 
notes, date announcements, even testing) at home.


Considering we also have no guarantee that any new organisation would be 
more receptive to the needs and concerns of the third-party end users 
than the WMF is currently, and there would still be things we would need 
to go to the WMF directly about anyway (thus making it even harder to 
figure out where to go for something), I find this all very worrying.


-I

On 04/08/14 12:40, Markus Glaser wrote:

Hello everyone,

the Wiki Release Team invites you to get involved in a much needed effort to 
build a separate entity that cares about the third party use of MediaWiki.  We 
ask for your involvement and participation because, as a community, we need to 
drive MediaWiki!

Be a part of something big!

1.Join our mailing list of interested people on wikireleaseteam.org [1]
2.Attend our first meeting [2]:
Wikimania London
Sunday, August 10, 2014 at 11:30AM GMT
Hammerson Room and/or webstreaming
3.Help us help you by providing feedback and comments as we work through an 
environmental scan and development roadmap

With the formation of the release team, a first step has been taken to separate 
the releases from the deployment process. Now is the time to tackle the task of 
building and working our way towards an organisation that cares for MediaWiki 
as a software product. This organisation will foster the MediaWiki third-party 
community, facilitate the exchange of ideas and resources among the third-party 
users, advocate the third-party needs, and advise the MediaWiki development 
from the third party perspective.

Spreading open knowledge is not just about content, but also about tools. 
However, third party users of MediaWiki have very specific needs that are 
naturally of minor interest to running Wikimedia sites. These include the 
installer, support for different platforms and databases, integration with 
other software, extension dependencies, and packaging, just to name a few.

Our mission, far from being complete, is just beginning.  With your help and 
involvement we can make an impact to improve MediaWiki for the third party 
community.

Best,
Mark Hershberger and Markus Glaser
Wiki Release Team

[1] http://wikireleaseteam.org/
[2] 
https://wikimania2014.wikimedia.org/wiki/Submissions/How_about_a_MediaWiki_Consortium%3F

___
Mediawiki-enterprise mailing list
mediawiki-enterpr...@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/mediawiki-enterprise



___
Wikitech-l mailing list
Wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l

Re: [Wikitech-l] [Mediawiki-enterprise] MediaWiki for the third party community: get involved!

2014-08-04 Thread Derric Atzrott
This reply is as I understand the situation to be.  If anyone else can
provide a bit more insight into things, or correct me where I am wrong,
I would be grateful.

 Hi,
 
 What would be the purpose of this organisation and separate community, 
 exactly? Has there been any demonstrated need or even want for such an 
 organisation amongst the community it would proportedly serve?
 

This is something that has been in the works on Wikitech-l for some time
now.  The folks on Wikitech-l and the WMF have come to the decision that
they can't really dedicate the resources required to handle third parties
properly (someone correct me if I am wrong on this).

They are going to be working with the folks over at Debian, among other
places, to get the vary Linux distributions packages up-to-date and keep
them up-to-date.

They are also going to be giving the installer a little bit more love than
it currently has, and working on additional database support.  The WMF is
paying them for their work.  Its a contracted deal to offload some of the
development and release tasks that primarily benefit third-party users to
someone who can actually dedicate the time and effort to listen to third-
party users.

Given the luck that enteprise has had in the past at getting some features
added to Mediawiki (without coding them ourselves that is), I believe that
a need has definitely been demonstrated.  As an enteprise user myself, I
personally want this and like the idea, so while I can't speak for
everyone, at least one person in the community wants it.

 I ask in particular because as a third-party sysadmin myself, it's hard 
 enough following all the relevant discussion and information that 
 concerns releases as it is already.

I think the idea is that they will be consolodating these as much as
possible.  Though, I will say that I think they should keep using this
list as the primary list for enteprise instead of having their own
mailing list as well.  Unless the enterprise list is to be deprecated.

It would be nice to just be able to subscribe to two lists as a
third-party user, mediawiki-enteprise-l and announcements-l.

 Adding another organisation on top 
 of that, with its own lists and websites to check and follow, and 
 another layer of community to go through to get things upstreamed, seems 
 highly premature when we can't even consolidate the basics (release 
 notes, date announcements, even testing) at home.

I suspect that they will be more able to help third-party users get things
upstreamed.  Or at least that is my hope.

They should also be handling release notes and date announcements entirely
now for third-party users (assuming I've understood correctly).  I think
that this will lead to more consistent and easier to understand release
notes and announcements.

I can't really say anything about testing.  I'm not terribly familiar with
any of our testing infrastructure to be honest.

 Considering we also have no guarantee that any new organisation would be 
 more receptive to the needs and concerns of the third-party end users 
 than the WMF is currently, and there would still be things we would need 
 to go to the WMF directly about anyway (thus making it even harder to 
 figure out where to go for something), I find this all very worrying.

They are being paid to be more receptive, so I hope that they will be.

I should hope that they will also be able to act as a liason between
third-party users and the Mediawiki development community.

Personally, I don't find it worrying, I actually find it quite refreshing.
Its about time third-party users were treated as first-party citizens! :D

Thank you,
Derric Atzrott


___
Wikitech-l mailing list
Wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l

Re: [Wikitech-l] [Mediawiki-enterprise] MediaWiki for the third party community: get involved!

2014-08-04 Thread Isarra Yos
Aye, these are valid points, and there are very real issues with what we 
have (and don't have) currently.


But why do we need a separate organisation to address them? Why can they 
not be addressed at home, on mw.org? Why hasn't any of this 
consolidation happened already, before adding another level of complexity?


Some comments inline, too, but they're less relevant to my main 
point/question.


On 04/08/14 16:27, Derric Atzrott wrote:

This reply is as I understand the situation to be.  If anyone else can
provide a bit more insight into things, or correct me where I am wrong,
I would be grateful.


Hi,

What would be the purpose of this organisation and separate community,
exactly? Has there been any demonstrated need or even want for such an
organisation amongst the community it would proportedly serve?


This is something that has been in the works on Wikitech-l for some time
now.  The folks on Wikitech-l and the WMF have come to the decision that
they can't really dedicate the resources required to handle third parties
properly (someone correct me if I am wrong on this).


I thought that was what the release managers were supposed to be doing. 
I could be wrong.



They are going to be working with the folks over at Debian, among other
places, to get the vary Linux distributions packages up-to-date and keep
them up-to-date.

They are also going to be giving the installer a little bit more love than
it currently has, and working on additional database support.  The WMF is
paying them for their work.  Its a contracted deal to offload some of the
development and release tasks that primarily benefit third-party users to
someone who can actually dedicate the time and effort to listen to third-
party users.


But is there any reason these would need to be off mw.org etc and out of 
the existing communities? Why they would need an entirely new community? 
How would that help?



Given the luck that enteprise has had in the past at getting some features
added to Mediawiki (without coding them ourselves that is), I believe that
a need has definitely been demonstrated.  As an enteprise user myself, I
personally want this and like the idea, so while I can't speak for
everyone, at least one person in the community wants it.


In open source, that's how it works - unless you get lucky or it's 
fairly generic, you need to code specific pieces you need yourself, or 
explicitly pay someone else to do it. Developer time isn't free, even if 
they are donating it.


A new organisation would not change that.




I ask in particular because as a third-party sysadmin myself, it's hard
enough following all the relevant discussion and information that
concerns releases as it is already.

I think the idea is that they will be consolodating these as much as
possible.  Though, I will say that I think they should keep using this
list as the primary list for enteprise instead of having their own
mailing list as well.  Unless the enterprise list is to be deprecated.

It would be nice to just be able to subscribe to two lists as a
third-party user, mediawiki-enteprise-l and announcements-l.


If you have custom extensions, large scale, and/or like to keep up to 
date, wikitech-l is pretty much a requirement too, since architectural 
changes and whatnot are discussed there, and they will affect how you do 
things even if you don't have a particular stake in the outcome.


If you do, however, the only way to ensure your voice is heard is to 
speak up for yourself, or hire someone directly to do so. This is 
unfortunate because some discussions (such as the Architecture Summit) 
can be particularly time-consuming and potentially costly, but my 
experience there and on various lists (with the WMF, with the Marks, and 
others) has been that nobody else will speak for you unless they have an 
explicit reason to do so. Someone else paying them to do so is not such 
a reason, because people answer to the people who pay them, not random 
people out on the sidelines.



Adding another organisation on top
of that, with its own lists and websites to check and follow, and
another layer of community to go through to get things upstreamed, seems
highly premature when we can't even consolidate the basics (release
notes, date announcements, even testing) at home.

I suspect that they will be more able to help third-party users get things
upstreamed.  Or at least that is my hope.

They should also be handling release notes and date announcements entirely
now for third-party users (assuming I've understood correctly).  I think
that this will lead to more consistent and easier to understand release
notes and announcements.

I can't really say anything about testing.  I'm not terribly familiar with
any of our testing infrastructure to be honest.


These things can easily be done without a new organisation and 
community. They just take time and resources regardless of where they 
wind up.


The new organisation and community would also take time 

Re: [Wikitech-l] [Mediawiki-enterprise] MediaWiki for the third party community: get involved!

2014-08-04 Thread Brion Vibber
I believe the point is to actively work on *doing* the third party support.
This does not require an Organization or Community *unrelated* to all
of us here talking on this list, but does require people with particular
common interests to communicate and act together for their common benefit.
As such I'm not too worried about the words used above, and would prefer to
hear a little more from the meeting before calling it out as a problem.

IMO offering commercial support and contracting services directly from WMF
or a subsidiary would be best, but WMF currently prefers to outsource even
the tarball releases so some self-organization is going to be needed to
provide community support.

-- brion
 On Aug 4, 2014 6:29 PM, Isarra Yos zhoris...@gmail.com wrote:

 Aye, these are valid points, and there are very real issues with what we
 have (and don't have) currently.

 But why do we need a separate organisation to address them? Why can they
 not be addressed at home, on mw.org? Why hasn't any of this consolidation
 happened already, before adding another level of complexity?

 Some comments inline, too, but they're less relevant to my main
 point/question.

 On 04/08/14 16:27, Derric Atzrott wrote:

 This reply is as I understand the situation to be.  If anyone else can
 provide a bit more insight into things, or correct me where I am wrong,
 I would be grateful.

  Hi,

 What would be the purpose of this organisation and separate community,
 exactly? Has there been any demonstrated need or even want for such an
 organisation amongst the community it would proportedly serve?

  This is something that has been in the works on Wikitech-l for some time
 now.  The folks on Wikitech-l and the WMF have come to the decision that
 they can't really dedicate the resources required to handle third parties
 properly (someone correct me if I am wrong on this).


 I thought that was what the release managers were supposed to be doing. I
 could be wrong.

  They are going to be working with the folks over at Debian, among other
 places, to get the vary Linux distributions packages up-to-date and keep
 them up-to-date.

 They are also going to be giving the installer a little bit more love than
 it currently has, and working on additional database support.  The WMF is
 paying them for their work.  Its a contracted deal to offload some of the
 development and release tasks that primarily benefit third-party users to
 someone who can actually dedicate the time and effort to listen to third-
 party users.


 But is there any reason these would need to be off mw.org etc and out of
 the existing communities? Why they would need an entirely new community?
 How would that help?

  Given the luck that enteprise has had in the past at getting some features
 added to Mediawiki (without coding them ourselves that is), I believe that
 a need has definitely been demonstrated.  As an enteprise user myself, I
 personally want this and like the idea, so while I can't speak for
 everyone, at least one person in the community wants it.


 In open source, that's how it works - unless you get lucky or it's fairly
 generic, you need to code specific pieces you need yourself, or explicitly
 pay someone else to do it. Developer time isn't free, even if they are
 donating it.

 A new organisation would not change that.


  I ask in particular because as a third-party sysadmin myself, it's hard
 enough following all the relevant discussion and information that
 concerns releases as it is already.

 I think the idea is that they will be consolodating these as much as
 possible.  Though, I will say that I think they should keep using this
 list as the primary list for enteprise instead of having their own
 mailing list as well.  Unless the enterprise list is to be deprecated.

 It would be nice to just be able to subscribe to two lists as a
 third-party user, mediawiki-enteprise-l and announcements-l.


 If you have custom extensions, large scale, and/or like to keep up to
 date, wikitech-l is pretty much a requirement too, since architectural
 changes and whatnot are discussed there, and they will affect how you do
 things even if you don't have a particular stake in the outcome.

 If you do, however, the only way to ensure your voice is heard is to speak
 up for yourself, or hire someone directly to do so. This is unfortunate
 because some discussions (such as the Architecture Summit) can be
 particularly time-consuming and potentially costly, but my experience there
 and on various lists (with the WMF, with the Marks, and others) has been
 that nobody else will speak for you unless they have an explicit reason to
 do so. Someone else paying them to do so is not such a reason, because
 people answer to the people who pay them, not random people out on the
 sidelines.

  Adding another organisation on top
 of that, with its own lists and websites to check and follow, and
 another layer of community to go through to get things upstreamed, seems
 highly