2011/2/18 Karsten Wade <kw...@redhat.com>: > One important thing in open source culture that we seem to be > forgetting here is that "the person who does the work, decides how > that work gets done."
I can easily see how OSUOSL, with substantial support in terms of people, resources, etc., can meet many/all of the needs articulated in your swim lane chart. I don't see how two, possibly three volunteers can. That's my concern. Your chart spells out the needs that POSSE participants have articulated over the past year+ that they see as useful both during and after workshops. The nascent TOS infrastructure team has articulated that most of that belongs "in the community," thrown out the swim lane chart, and made a feature list of their own that they're prepared to implement. (I haven't seen IRC logs or documentation that suggest otherwise, but I'm buried rather badly, and admit freely that I may be wrong/have missed something.) I do not think we have proceeded in a user-centric manner, and I don't think we're going to meet the needs of POSSEs or their alumni by proceeding down a thinly provisioned, do-it-from-scratch path. But then again, FOSS communities are (as you say) fundamentally developer-centric, not user-centric. Those are my concerns. But, as you say, I'm not doing the work, so I'll keep quiet. Cheers, Matt _______________________________________________ tos mailing list tos@teachingopensource.org http://teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos