Hello Kim, On 08/07/19 13:11 +0900, 김동현 wrote: > I'm Donghyun Kim. > > I work as a system engineer in Korea. > > In the meantime, I was very interested in the cluster and want > to promote it in Korea. > There are many high-availability cases in Linux systems. > > The reason why I am sending this mail is whether I can use the name > "ClusterLabs Korea" in my Facebook community.
I am in no authority to decide this matter, and generally speaking, the monicker in question we reached consensus to represent "us" as a community (and be the label for an easy association with the SW components of the cluster stack "we" evolve/deploy, also to avoid further ambiguities or unnecessary verbosity when referring to "us") is still rather an informal convention rather than something we could claim exclusivity about. Nonetheless, it's very kind of you that you seek approval for label reference/association first. It's good to be clear in these collective entity matters, like for instance about the license/reusability of ClusterLabs logo (originally devised by Krig, license subsequently clarified on the developers aimed sibling list[1]). > It's only for the Facebook community. > > Then I'll be looking forward to your reply. > have a nice day I am leaving this question open for more impactful community members, but if I could have a single question, it would be about the reasons for having a rather detached group. It may be some cultural context I may be missing -- does it have, for instance, something to do with language barrier, with face to face opportunities to meet up locally, or with heavy preference of Facebook over technically oriented forums (like Reddit for general discussion, StackOverflow for Q&A, etc.; of course, if blessed ClusterLabs communications channels[2] are not a fit for whatever reason, otherwise they would ideally be the first choice to avoid community fragmentation) where it would possibly be more accessible for some people saving them also from imminent leakage of personal data which is hardly (in a philosphical sense) justifiable for the purpose of "having a technical discussion about particular FOSS software"? Just curious about this, looking forward to hearing from you. P.S. speaking of community subdivisions, it's rather interesting to me personally that also Japanese advanced their local group (actually a long ago before I got to pacemaker), and as I just checked, it seems still rather active: http://linux-ha.osdn.jp/wp/ (that's beside contributions to, say, Pacemaker coming in from people of that country, and some stuff like https://github.com/linux-ha-japan I never got to explore -- as mentioned, less fragmentation and we could all be benefitting from getting to know the wider landscape in a natural way, I believe). [1] https://lists.clusterlabs.org/pipermail/developers/2019-April/002184.html [2] https://clusterlabs.org/faq.html + https://wiki.clusterlabs.org/wiki/FAQ#Where_should_I_ask_questions.3F -- Jan (Poki)
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