Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Marcus

In any case this is too much traffic on the private mailing list.

I would understand Dennis' mail as a wake-up call how much it is 
currently and that there is an urgent need to turn down the number of mails.


Marcus



Am 08/28/2015 11:58 PM, schrieb Phillip Rhodes:

So what, if anything, should we take away from this?  My (completely
superficial, naive and uninformed) feeling is that that is a LOT of traffic
on the private list.  But maybe not.  Anyway, is the idea here that there
should be less traffic on that list? More? The same?

I have to admit, I've been pretty dormant for a long-time, so I'm a little
out of touch with what's going on (gone on) here, but you have me intrigued
with this.


Phil


This message optimized for indexing by NSA PRISM

On Fri, Aug 28, 2015 at 3:09 PM, Dennis E. Hamiltonorc...@apache.org
wrote:


 From an AOO PMC Member,

I have compiled a high-level traffic analysis of discussion activity on
the OpenOffice PMC private@ oo.a.o list.  These are *statistics* and
noisy ones at that.  I am looking for trends that are good-enough at this
level of precision.  It is in the nature of private@ that message content
and even the topics must be held in confidence.

This report of gross metrics is for the community's appraisal of current
state and later progress.  The movement of discussions to the community
when the confidentiality requirements for PMC discussion do not apply
should be seen in movements at this level.  Further reports over the course
of the year may provide an useful indicator.

OVERALL PRIVATE MESSAGE TRAFFIC

This is a breakdown of the traffic in the 212 days from January through
July, 2015, by role of the sender.

 2015 | Private List Messages
thru July | PMC  ASF  Other   All

   Totals  1145  182 31  1358
  Senders22   23 2368
   Per sender  52.0  7.91.3  20.0
(average)
  Per day   5.4  0.90.1   6.4

Of all the messages sent,

   84% are by members of the PMC,
   16% are by other ASF participants, and
   17% are by others.

The ASF participants include members of Apache Infrastructure, Officers of
the ASF, and other ASF Members and staff who make posts to the private
list.  The Other senders are members of the public and non-PMC Apache
OpenOffice contributors that raise questions or provide information to the
PMC via private@.

For the 1145 messages from the 22 PMC members who posted to the list so
far this year,

   49% of the messages are from the three
   PMC members who were the most vocal
   in the studied period.
   75% of the messages are from the seven
   most vocal.
   91% were from the most vocal 11 of the
   22 PMC members that posted.

I confess to being one of those top three posters.


NUMBER OF SUBJECTS AND AMOUNT OF DISCUSSION

A review of the same message archives, for January - July, 2015, tallied

  168 subjects discussed across 1341 posts,
  about 0.8 new topics per day.
The variance of 17 from the first tally
  is negligible and will not be corrected.
  The raw data is available for auditing
  by the PMC.

  8.0 is the average number of messages on a
  single subject

   5% is the portion of the overall messages
  used in the longest thread, one with
  73 messages

  50% of the messages are on the 20 longest
  discussion threads.  The shortest thread
  in that group has 18 messages.

  75% of the messages are on the 50 longest
  discussions.  The shortest threads in
  that group have 8 messages.

  90% of the messages are on the 84 longest
  discussions (i.e., half of the
  threads).  The shortest threads in
  that group have 4 messages each.

  The remaining 10% consists of 84 threads
  having 3, 2, and 1 messages each.

This does not speak to the quality or the necessity of these messages and
any particular thread.  The PMC has detailed supporting data.

 [end of report]


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Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Rich Bowen
I'd love to see a comparison with a half dozen other projects.
On Aug 29, 2015 02:42, Marcus marcus.m...@wtnet.de wrote:

 In any case this is too much traffic on the private mailing list.

 I would understand Dennis' mail as a wake-up call how much it is currently
 and that there is an urgent need to turn down the number of mails.

 Marcus



 Am 08/28/2015 11:58 PM, schrieb Phillip Rhodes:

 So what, if anything, should we take away from this?  My (completely
 superficial, naive and uninformed) feeling is that that is a LOT of
 traffic
 on the private list.  But maybe not.  Anyway, is the idea here that
 there
 should be less traffic on that list? More? The same?

 I have to admit, I've been pretty dormant for a long-time, so I'm a little
 out of touch with what's going on (gone on) here, but you have me
 intrigued
 with this.


 Phil


 This message optimized for indexing by NSA PRISM

 On Fri, Aug 28, 2015 at 3:09 PM, Dennis E. Hamiltonorc...@apache.org
 wrote:

  From an AOO PMC Member,

 I have compiled a high-level traffic analysis of discussion activity on
 the OpenOffice PMC private@ oo.a.o list.  These are *statistics* and
 noisy ones at that.  I am looking for trends that are good-enough at this
 level of precision.  It is in the nature of private@ that message
 content
 and even the topics must be held in confidence.

 This report of gross metrics is for the community's appraisal of current
 state and later progress.  The movement of discussions to the community
 when the confidentiality requirements for PMC discussion do not apply
 should be seen in movements at this level.  Further reports over the
 course
 of the year may provide an useful indicator.

 OVERALL PRIVATE MESSAGE TRAFFIC

 This is a breakdown of the traffic in the 212 days from January through
 July, 2015, by role of the sender.

  2015 | Private List Messages
 thru July | PMC  ASF  Other   All

Totals  1145  182 31  1358
   Senders22   23 2368
Per sender  52.0 7.9 1.3 20.0
 (average)
   Per day   5.4  0.90.1   6.4

 Of all the messages sent,

84% are by members of the PMC,
16% are by other ASF participants, and
17% are by others.

 The ASF participants include members of Apache Infrastructure, Officers
 of
 the ASF, and other ASF Members and staff who make posts to the private
 list.  The Other senders are members of the public and non-PMC Apache
 OpenOffice contributors that raise questions or provide information to
 the
 PMC via private@.

 For the 1145 messages from the 22 PMC members who posted to the list so
 far this year,

49% of the messages are from the three
PMC members who were the most vocal
in the studied period.
75% of the messages are from the seven
most vocal.
91% were from the most vocal 11 of the
22 PMC members that posted.

 I confess to being one of those top three posters.


 NUMBER OF SUBJECTS AND AMOUNT OF DISCUSSION

 A review of the same message archives, for January - July, 2015, tallied

   168 subjects discussed across 1341 posts,
   about 0.8 new topics per day.
 The variance of 17 from the first tally
   is negligible and will not be corrected.
   The raw data is available for auditing
   by the PMC.

   8.0 is the average number of messages on a
   single subject

5% is the portion of the overall messages
   used in the longest thread, one with
   73 messages

   50% of the messages are on the 20 longest
   discussion threads.  The shortest thread
   in that group has 18 messages.

   75% of the messages are on the 50 longest
   discussions.  The shortest threads in
   that group have 8 messages.

   90% of the messages are on the 84 longest
   discussions (i.e., half of the
   threads).  The shortest threads in
   that group have 4 messages each.

   The remaining 10% consists of 84 threads
   having 3, 2, and 1 messages each.

 This does not speak to the quality or the necessity of these messages and
 any particular thread.  The PMC has detailed supporting data.

  [end of report]


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Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Phil Steitz


On 8/29/15 8:39 AM, Rich Bowen wrote:
 I'd love to see a comparison with a half dozen other projects.

I would discourage any reasoning based on aggregate message counts. 
Every +1 on a PMC member VOTE counts as a message, for example.  The
thing to look carefully at is what is being discussed on the private
list.  A lot of discussion bearing on topics important to the
direction of the project is bad, bad, bad.  Healthy projects have
quiet private@ lists because pretty much everything they need to
talk about they can and do talk about on the public lists.  But
committer / PMC votes, security issues and occasional random legal
or must-be-private people-related things pop up and cause traffic
spikes when they do.  So I would not draw conclusions or do
comparisons based on message counts.  Better to compare what is
actually being discussed.

Phil
 On Aug 29, 2015 02:42, Marcus marcus.m...@wtnet.de wrote:

 In any case this is too much traffic on the private mailing list.

 I would understand Dennis' mail as a wake-up call how much it is currently
 and that there is an urgent need to turn down the number of mails.

 Marcus



 Am 08/28/2015 11:58 PM, schrieb Phillip Rhodes:

 So what, if anything, should we take away from this?  My (completely
 superficial, naive and uninformed) feeling is that that is a LOT of
 traffic
 on the private list.  But maybe not.  Anyway, is the idea here that
 there
 should be less traffic on that list? More? The same?

 I have to admit, I've been pretty dormant for a long-time, so I'm a little
 out of touch with what's going on (gone on) here, but you have me
 intrigued
 with this.


 Phil


 This message optimized for indexing by NSA PRISM

 On Fri, Aug 28, 2015 at 3:09 PM, Dennis E. Hamiltonorc...@apache.org
 wrote:

  From an AOO PMC Member,
 I have compiled a high-level traffic analysis of discussion activity on
 the OpenOffice PMC private@ oo.a.o list.  These are *statistics* and
 noisy ones at that.  I am looking for trends that are good-enough at this
 level of precision.  It is in the nature of private@ that message
 content
 and even the topics must be held in confidence.

 This report of gross metrics is for the community's appraisal of current
 state and later progress.  The movement of discussions to the community
 when the confidentiality requirements for PMC discussion do not apply
 should be seen in movements at this level.  Further reports over the
 course
 of the year may provide an useful indicator.

 OVERALL PRIVATE MESSAGE TRAFFIC

 This is a breakdown of the traffic in the 212 days from January through
 July, 2015, by role of the sender.

  2015 | Private List Messages
 thru July | PMC  ASF  Other   All

Totals  1145  182 31  1358
   Senders22   23 2368
Per sender  52.0 7.9 1.3 20.0
 (average)
   Per day   5.4  0.90.1   6.4

 Of all the messages sent,

84% are by members of the PMC,
16% are by other ASF participants, and
17% are by others.

 The ASF participants include members of Apache Infrastructure, Officers
 of
 the ASF, and other ASF Members and staff who make posts to the private
 list.  The Other senders are members of the public and non-PMC Apache
 OpenOffice contributors that raise questions or provide information to
 the
 PMC via private@.

 For the 1145 messages from the 22 PMC members who posted to the list so
 far this year,

49% of the messages are from the three
PMC members who were the most vocal
in the studied period.
75% of the messages are from the seven
most vocal.
91% were from the most vocal 11 of the
22 PMC members that posted.

 I confess to being one of those top three posters.


 NUMBER OF SUBJECTS AND AMOUNT OF DISCUSSION

 A review of the same message archives, for January - July, 2015, tallied

   168 subjects discussed across 1341 posts,
   about 0.8 new topics per day.
 The variance of 17 from the first tally
   is negligible and will not be corrected.
   The raw data is available for auditing
   by the PMC.

   8.0 is the average number of messages on a
   single subject

5% is the portion of the overall messages
   used in the longest thread, one with
   73 messages

   50% of the messages are on the 20 longest
   discussion threads.  The shortest thread
   in that group has 18 messages.

   75% of the messages are on the 50 longest
   discussions.  The shortest threads in
   that group have 8 messages.

   90% of the messages are on the 84 longest
   discussions (i.e., half of the
   threads).  The shortest threads in
   that group have 4 messages each.

   The remaining 10% consists of 84 threads
   having 3, 2, and 1 messages each.

 This does not speak to the quality or the necessity of these messages and
 any particular thread.  The PMC has detailed 

Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Rich Bowen
On Aug 29, 2015 12:21, Phil Steitz phil.ste...@gmail.com wrote:



 On 8/29/15 8:39 AM, Rich Bowen wrote:
  I'd love to see a comparison with a half dozen other projects.

 I would discourage any reasoning based on aggregate message counts.
 Every +1 on a PMC member VOTE counts as a message, for example.  The
 thing to look carefully at is what is being discussed on the private
 list.  A lot of discussion bearing on topics important to the
 direction of the project is bad, bad, bad.  Healthy projects have
 quiet private@ lists because pretty much everything they need to
 talk about they can and do talk about on the public lists.  But
 committer / PMC votes, security issues and occasional random legal
 or must-be-private people-related things pop up and cause traffic
 spikes when they do.  So I would not draw conclusions or do
 comparisons based on message counts.  Better to compare what is
 actually being discussed.

Absolutely. And I completely agree that aoo has too much traffic on private@.
I'd just really like to see if it's as skewed as I perceive it is,
statistically speaking.


RE: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Dennis E. Hamilton
Good idea, Phil

Separating out [VOTE] and maybe even [DISCUSS] threads related to [VOTE]s 
and/or lazy consensus should be possible.  I will look into that as a 
refinement in future reports.  (It will also be helpful if the practices for 
tagging mail threads are followed consistently.)

It should be pretty easy to distinguish posts that are in scope for a PMC and 
those that are not, without revealing anything posted with an expectation of 
privacy.

Rich,

I have no means to produce comparisons with other projects and it is out of 
scope for me here.  Maybe other projects might undertake it just to satisfy 
themselves that their activity is as confined as it is thought to be.

-Original Message-
From: Phil Steitz [mailto:phil.ste...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Saturday, August 29, 2015 09:21
To: dev@openoffice.apache.org
Subject: Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July



On 8/29/15 8:39 AM, Rich Bowen wrote:
 I'd love to see a comparison with a half dozen other projects.

[ ... ] But
committer / PMC votes, security issues and occasional random legal
or must-be-private people-related things pop up and cause traffic
spikes when they do.  So I would not draw conclusions or do
comparisons based on message counts.  Better to compare what is
actually being discussed.

[ ... ]


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Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Andrea Pescetti

Dennis E. Hamilton wrote:

Separating out [VOTE] and maybe even [DISCUSS] threads related to
[VOTE]s and/or lazy consensus should be possible.  I will look into
that as a refinement in future reports.


I would save you some hours and rely on easy indicators and on a clear 
goal: full transparency (let me say, once again, that private traffic 
does not contain any important discussions or decisions, but still I 
appreciate that we commit to showing it).


So, from my mailbox data (and they might be slightly imprecise but we do 
not want absolute precision here): the private list accounts for 20% of 
the traffic of English OpenOffice lists in the period considered (1 
January to 31 July 2015). I obviously excluded the issues@ and commits@ 
list, and I excluded all native-language lists.


20% is high. OK, we had three Chair elections so far in 2015, PMC 
additions and several committer invitations; and the press and trademark 
inquiries are numerous. But still 20% is high.


Thank you Dennis for the numbers, and now the focus should be on how we 
can improve them and explain them.


Improve: we can aim at reducing that number to be below 20%, and to keep 
your other absolute numbers under control too (while other indicators, 
such as the thread length, do not add value and add work, and are not 
meaningful to me at least).


Explain: I would appreciate to see a paragraph in the quarterly report 
about how (not numbers: topics) the private list was used in the 
previous reporting period (so: October 2015 Report contains a report 
about private activity in April-May-June). Five lines, saying what was 
discussed there, without revealing any specific details; and saying 
whether action was taken to move interesting conversations to the dev 
list (which happens quite often). I suspect that this is more 
interesting, to the community and the Board, than having better numbers 
without context.


Regards,
  Andrea.

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Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Dave Fisher
We could reduce private traffic if we discussed the policy for trademarks in 
public. The community can help write a clear policy statement with real and 
fictional examples. This would serve the community by reducing private 
inquiries to unusual cases not previously considered or unclearly explained.

Regards,
Dave

Sent from my iPhone

 On Aug 29, 2015, at 12:19 PM, Andrea Pescetti pesce...@apache.org wrote:
 
 Dennis E. Hamilton wrote:
 Separating out [VOTE] and maybe even [DISCUSS] threads related to
 [VOTE]s and/or lazy consensus should be possible.  I will look into
 that as a refinement in future reports.
 
 I would save you some hours and rely on easy indicators and on a clear goal: 
 full transparency (let me say, once again, that private traffic does not 
 contain any important discussions or decisions, but still I appreciate that 
 we commit to showing it).
 
 So, from my mailbox data (and they might be slightly imprecise but we do not 
 want absolute precision here): the private list accounts for 20% of the 
 traffic of English OpenOffice lists in the period considered (1 January to 31 
 July 2015). I obviously excluded the issues@ and commits@ list, and I 
 excluded all native-language lists.
 
 20% is high. OK, we had three Chair elections so far in 2015, PMC additions 
 and several committer invitations; and the press and trademark inquiries are 
 numerous. But still 20% is high.
 
 Thank you Dennis for the numbers, and now the focus should be on how we can 
 improve them and explain them.
 
 Improve: we can aim at reducing that number to be below 20%, and to keep your 
 other absolute numbers under control too (while other indicators, such as the 
 thread length, do not add value and add work, and are not meaningful to me at 
 least).
 
 Explain: I would appreciate to see a paragraph in the quarterly report about 
 how (not numbers: topics) the private list was used in the previous reporting 
 period (so: October 2015 Report contains a report about private activity in 
 April-May-June). Five lines, saying what was discussed there, without 
 revealing any specific details; and saying whether action was taken to move 
 interesting conversations to the dev list (which happens quite often). I 
 suspect that this is more interesting, to the community and the Board, than 
 having better numbers without context.
 
 Regards,
  Andrea.
 
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RE: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-29 Thread Rich Bowen
On Aug 29, 2015 14:02, Dennis E. Hamilton orc...@apache.org wrote:


 Rich,

 I have no means to produce comparisons with other projects and it is out
of scope for me here.  Maybe other projects might undertake it just to
satisfy themselves that their activity is as confined as it is thought to
be.


Or, possibly someone from infra that is fascinated with statistics could
whip something up as part of the reporter tool. ;)

No, it was just an idle what if.


RE: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-28 Thread Dennis E. Hamilton
With a correction already,

Of all the messages sent, 

  84.3% are by members of the PMC, 
  13.4% are by other ASF participants, and 
   2.3% are by others.

[The extra decimals are simply to achieve a confirmable total of 100%, 
precision not so much.]

-Original Message-
From: Dennis E. Hamilton [mailto:orc...@apache.org] 
Sent: Friday, August 28, 2015 12:09
To: dev@openoffice.apache.org
Subject: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July 

From an AOO PMC Member,

I have compiled a high-level traffic analysis of discussion activity on the 
OpenOffice PMC private@ oo.a.o list.  These are *statistics* and noisy ones at 
that.  I am looking for trends that are good-enough at this level of precision. 
 It is in the nature of private@ that message content and even the topics must 
be held in confidence.

This report of gross metrics is for the community's appraisal of current state 
and later progress.  The movement of discussions to the community when the 
confidentiality requirements for PMC discussion do not apply should be seen in 
movements at this level.  Further reports over the course of the year may 
provide an useful indicator.
 
OVERALL PRIVATE MESSAGE TRAFFIC

This is a breakdown of the traffic in the 212 days from January through July, 
2015, by role of the sender.

2015 | Private List Messages
   thru July | PMC  ASF  Other   All

  Totals  1145  182 31  1358
 Senders22   23 2368 
  Per sender  52.0  7.91.3  20.0 
   (average)
 Per day   5.4  0.90.1   6.4

Of all the messages sent, 

  84% are by members of the PMC, 
  16% are by other ASF participants, and 
  17% are by others.

The ASF participants include members of Apache Infrastructure, Officers of the 
ASF, and other ASF Members and staff who make posts to the private list.  The 
Other senders are members of the public and non-PMC Apache OpenOffice 
contributors that raise questions or provide information to the PMC via 
private@.

For the 1145 messages from the 22 PMC members who posted to the list so far 
this year, 

  49% of the messages are from the three 
  PMC members who were the most vocal 
  in the studied period. 
  75% of the messages are from the seven 
  most vocal.  
  91% were from the most vocal 11 of the
  22 PMC members that posted.

I confess to being one of those top three posters.


NUMBER OF SUBJECTS AND AMOUNT OF DISCUSSION

A review of the same message archives, for January - July, 2015, tallied 

 168 subjects discussed across 1341 posts,
 about 0.8 new topics per day.
   The variance of 17 from the first tally 
 is negligible and will not be corrected.
 The raw data is available for auditing
 by the PMC.  

 8.0 is the average number of messages on a 
 single subject

  5% is the portion of the overall messages
 used in the longest thread, one with
 73 messages

 50% of the messages are on the 20 longest
 discussion threads.  The shortest thread
 in that group has 18 messages.

 75% of the messages are on the 50 longest
 discussions.  The shortest threads in
 that group have 8 messages.

 90% of the messages are on the 84 longest
 discussions (i.e., half of the
 threads).  The shortest threads in
 that group have 4 messages each.  

 The remaining 10% consists of 84 threads
 having 3, 2, and 1 messages each.

This does not speak to the quality or the necessity of these messages and any 
particular thread.  The PMC has detailed supporting data. 

[end of report]


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Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-28 Thread Phillip Rhodes
So what, if anything, should we take away from this?  My (completely
superficial, naive and uninformed) feeling is that that is a LOT of traffic
on the private list.  But maybe not.  Anyway, is the idea here that there
should be less traffic on that list? More? The same?

I have to admit, I've been pretty dormant for a long-time, so I'm a little
out of touch with what's going on (gone on) here, but you have me intrigued
with this.


Phil


This message optimized for indexing by NSA PRISM

On Fri, Aug 28, 2015 at 3:09 PM, Dennis E. Hamilton orc...@apache.org
wrote:

 From an AOO PMC Member,

 I have compiled a high-level traffic analysis of discussion activity on
 the OpenOffice PMC private@ oo.a.o list.  These are *statistics* and
 noisy ones at that.  I am looking for trends that are good-enough at this
 level of precision.  It is in the nature of private@ that message content
 and even the topics must be held in confidence.

 This report of gross metrics is for the community's appraisal of current
 state and later progress.  The movement of discussions to the community
 when the confidentiality requirements for PMC discussion do not apply
 should be seen in movements at this level.  Further reports over the course
 of the year may provide an useful indicator.

 OVERALL PRIVATE MESSAGE TRAFFIC

 This is a breakdown of the traffic in the 212 days from January through
 July, 2015, by role of the sender.

 2015 | Private List Messages
thru July | PMC  ASF  Other   All

   Totals  1145  182 31  1358
  Senders22   23 2368
   Per sender  52.0  7.91.3  20.0
(average)
  Per day   5.4  0.90.1   6.4

 Of all the messages sent,

   84% are by members of the PMC,
   16% are by other ASF participants, and
   17% are by others.

 The ASF participants include members of Apache Infrastructure, Officers of
 the ASF, and other ASF Members and staff who make posts to the private
 list.  The Other senders are members of the public and non-PMC Apache
 OpenOffice contributors that raise questions or provide information to the
 PMC via private@.

 For the 1145 messages from the 22 PMC members who posted to the list so
 far this year,

   49% of the messages are from the three
   PMC members who were the most vocal
   in the studied period.
   75% of the messages are from the seven
   most vocal.
   91% were from the most vocal 11 of the
   22 PMC members that posted.

 I confess to being one of those top three posters.


 NUMBER OF SUBJECTS AND AMOUNT OF DISCUSSION

 A review of the same message archives, for January - July, 2015, tallied

  168 subjects discussed across 1341 posts,
  about 0.8 new topics per day.
The variance of 17 from the first tally
  is negligible and will not be corrected.
  The raw data is available for auditing
  by the PMC.

  8.0 is the average number of messages on a
  single subject

   5% is the portion of the overall messages
  used in the longest thread, one with
  73 messages

  50% of the messages are on the 20 longest
  discussion threads.  The shortest thread
  in that group has 18 messages.

  75% of the messages are on the 50 longest
  discussions.  The shortest threads in
  that group have 8 messages.

  90% of the messages are on the 84 longest
  discussions (i.e., half of the
  threads).  The shortest threads in
  that group have 4 messages each.

  The remaining 10% consists of 84 threads
  having 3, 2, and 1 messages each.

 This does not speak to the quality or the necessity of these messages and
 any particular thread.  The PMC has detailed supporting data.

 [end of report]


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RE: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

2015-08-28 Thread Dennis E. Hamilton
I've heard that it is a whole lot and much more that the PMC policies warrant.

I dug into this to find out exactly what a whole lot is and whether it is a 
way to demonstrate, without breaching confidentiality, when activity more 
aligned with the policy is reached over time.

Thanks for your question and welcome back, Phil.

 - Dennis

-Original Message-
From: Phillip Rhodes [mailto:motley.crue@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, August 28, 2015 14:59
To: dev@openoffice.apache.org
Subject: Re: [REPORT] PMC 2015-07 Private-List Activity through July

So what, if anything, should we take away from this?  My (completely
superficial, naive and uninformed) feeling is that that is a LOT of traffic
on the private list.  But maybe not.  Anyway, is the idea here that there
should be less traffic on that list? More? The same?

I have to admit, I've been pretty dormant for a long-time, so I'm a little
out of touch with what's going on (gone on) here, but you have me intrigued
with this.


Phil


This message optimized for indexing by NSA PRISM

On Fri, Aug 28, 2015 at 3:09 PM, Dennis E. Hamilton orc...@apache.org
wrote:

 From an AOO PMC Member,

 I have compiled a high-level traffic analysis of discussion activity on
 the OpenOffice PMC private@ oo.a.o list.  These are *statistics* and
 noisy ones at that.  I am looking for trends that are good-enough at this
 level of precision.  It is in the nature of private@ that message content
 and even the topics must be held in confidence.

 This report of gross metrics is for the community's appraisal of current
 state and later progress.  The movement of discussions to the community
 when the confidentiality requirements for PMC discussion do not apply
 should be seen in movements at this level.  Further reports over the course
 of the year may provide an useful indicator.

 OVERALL PRIVATE MESSAGE TRAFFIC

 This is a breakdown of the traffic in the 212 days from January through
 July, 2015, by role of the sender.

 2015 | Private List Messages
thru July | PMC  ASF  Other   All

   Totals  1145  182 31  1358
  Senders22   23 2368
   Per sender  52.0  7.91.3  20.0
(average)
  Per day   5.4  0.90.1   6.4

 Of all the messages sent,

   84% are by members of the PMC,
   16% are by other ASF participants, and
   17% are by others.

 The ASF participants include members of Apache Infrastructure, Officers of
 the ASF, and other ASF Members and staff who make posts to the private
 list.  The Other senders are members of the public and non-PMC Apache
 OpenOffice contributors that raise questions or provide information to the
 PMC via private@.

 For the 1145 messages from the 22 PMC members who posted to the list so
 far this year,

   49% of the messages are from the three
   PMC members who were the most vocal
   in the studied period.
   75% of the messages are from the seven
   most vocal.
   91% were from the most vocal 11 of the
   22 PMC members that posted.

 I confess to being one of those top three posters.


 NUMBER OF SUBJECTS AND AMOUNT OF DISCUSSION

 A review of the same message archives, for January - July, 2015, tallied

  168 subjects discussed across 1341 posts,
  about 0.8 new topics per day.
The variance of 17 from the first tally
  is negligible and will not be corrected.
  The raw data is available for auditing
  by the PMC.

  8.0 is the average number of messages on a
  single subject

   5% is the portion of the overall messages
  used in the longest thread, one with
  73 messages

  50% of the messages are on the 20 longest
  discussion threads.  The shortest thread
  in that group has 18 messages.

  75% of the messages are on the 50 longest
  discussions.  The shortest threads in
  that group have 8 messages.

  90% of the messages are on the 84 longest
  discussions (i.e., half of the
  threads).  The shortest threads in
  that group have 4 messages each.

  The remaining 10% consists of 84 threads
  having 3, 2, and 1 messages each.

 This does not speak to the quality or the necessity of these messages and
 any particular thread.  The PMC has detailed supporting data.

 [end of report]


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