Hi Folks, I've been mulling on this for a bit. I think that there should definitely be a way for folks to attribute the originator, funder or supporter of work. For instance, I'd very much like to be able to post information about what my students have accomplished in FOSS and be able to label the work as being completed by "Western New England College" students. However, I'd prefer not to go so far as page branding.
My thoughts originate from the idea that TOS is a meeting place for _people_, not organizations. My view of TOS is as a place for meeting of the minds. A place where I go to ask questions and listen to people who are doing interesting things in FOSS. I'm much more concerned about who the individual is and what they're doing, than the organization that they belong to. My concern is that if we "brand" pages, the organization rather than the individual will gain more attention. Just my two cents. Heidi -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mel Chua Sent: Monday, July 26, 2010 4:26 PM To: TOS Subject: [TOS] How can we mark what activities a particular group is doing within TOS? Ian, Karsten, and I were talking earlier today about TOS as a neutral gathering place where different groups and people came and brought and talked about their work, and how each group can categorize and keep track of the things they're doing within the TOS space. I'd like to start keeping the Red Hat education strategy stuff I'm working on as pages on the TOS wiki, and would like to mark them as such - [[Category:Red Hat]], for instance, and perhaps a wiki page template with a Shadowman logo and a note at the top that a particular project on the TOS wiki (for instance, POSSE) is "a Red Hat community service." I could also see this being useful for other orgs and schools - "Hosted by OSU" or "an Allegheny project" or "brought to you by Seneca." How would people feel about such templates? In suggesting this, I'm trying to be conscious of both the need for TOS as a whole to remain a brand-neutral space, and the need for folks to be able to point to their organization's work *within* that neutral space - would this compromise be ok? If there are no objections in a day or two, we'll try it out and show folks what it looks like and offer help to other groups who'd like to do the same. --Mel _______________________________________________ tos mailing list [email protected] http://teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos _______________________________________________ tos mailing list [email protected] http://teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos
