Hi, I think we need more discussion on it. I'm not really convinced to use two separate issue tracker.
In my understanding, problem is, * JIRA is not friendly to non-developers. Solution proposed from Marko Galesic is, * Let user create issue on Trello, which has friendly UI for non-developers. * And create issue on JIRA based on vote on Trello. To me, It's not clear that - When/How issue is created in JIRA, based on vote in Trello - How issues created by JIRA are handled in Trello. Will someone manually add to Trello? - Who will be 'reporter' field in JIRA (User accounts are not synchronized between trello and JIRA) - What will happen, later if someone ask move to the other tool that is easier than Trello for end-users? My opinion is, Why not just create Trello like Dashboard in JIRA and make easy instruction for creating issue for end user. That would also solve the same problem. Thanks, moon On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 11:23 AM Marko Galesic < marko_gale...@progressive.com> wrote: > Alexander, > > -- Am I right that you suggest using Trello not instead of ASF hosted > JIRA, but together with it > > Yes > > -- Are volunteering to support it as a tool for prioritizing user's > feedback > > Yes > > -- Also, how do you think, should we then move further discussion to the > d...@zeppelin.incubator.apache.org as, I assume, you want project > developers to use it? > > I wouldn't be against it. I think the important part is that if the Trello > board needs buy in from devs to reflect votes made in Trello to JIRA + to > use those votes as a factor in feature development prioritization, then the > next step would be to open a thread on d...@zeppelin.incubator.apache.org. > Alexander, do you want to create the thread or should I? I am willing to > explain the idea to devs. > > The Trello board is open to the public, so anybody that is a member of > Trello will be able to vote. > > > I'm happy that you'd be willing to try it as an experiment. I'm also happy > to volunteer time maintaining it, and I already have. > > > The thought is, again, link votes in Trello to appropriate JIRA tickets. > Comments made in a card in Trello would not be reflected in JIRA, but > developers may get information from end-users that way. > > Those are my thoughts, > Marko > > -----Original Message----- > From: Alexander Bezzubov [mailto:abezzu...@nflabs.com] > Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2015 9:40 PM > To: users@zeppelin.incubator.apache.org > Subject: Re: Using Trello to Show Mid to High Level features in Apache > Zeppelin > > Guys, > > thank you for great suggestions! > > Am I right that you suggest using Trello not instead of ASF hosted JIRA, > but together with it, and are volunteering to support it as a tool for > prioritizing user's feedback? > > Also, how do you think, should we then move further discussion to the > d...@zeppelin.incubator.apache.org as, I assume, you want project > developers to use it? > > Personally, am not aware of anything that JIRA with the plugins can not > do, that trello can. But I see your point of having a simpler and more > user-friendly tool for the end user's feedback. > > Although question about whether the benefits at the end worth supporting > two systems is still is still open, I would be in favor of making an > experiment and giving it a try, in case somebody volunteers to manage > second one. > > What do you think? > > > > On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 8:13 AM, Marko Galesic < > marko_gale...@progressive.com> wrote: > > Hello A B! > > > > > > > > I’m really glad that you like the idea! I made sure that the board’s > > voting is public. However, you *do* need to be a Trello member in order > to vote. > > You can use your Google account to sign in or create an account > > through Trello. > > > > > > > > I found more projects that use Trello as a Roadmapping tool: > > http://blog.trello.com/going-public-roadmapping-with-a-public-trello-b > > oard/ > > > > > > > > Marko > > > > > > > > From: A B [mailto:netzbewoh...@gmail.com] > > Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2015 5:23 PM > > To: users@zeppelin.incubator.apache.org > > > > > > Subject: Re: Using Trello to Show Mid to High Level features in Apache > > Zeppelin > > > > > > > > Hi guys! > > > > I find the suggestion to vote via trello totally cool and would support > it. > > So if everyone is OK with this, let's do this. > > > > > > > > I was looking for such a possibility to have a community process to > > prioritize something for quite some time (have also played with > > various JIRA > > workarounds) - but this just blows my mind. Wish I had known it before > > :) > > > > > > > > Marko, pls check if you set rights correctly - i cant vote. > > > > > > > > On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 12:12 AM, Marko Galesic > > <marko_gale...@progressive.com> wrote: > > > > Hi moon, > > > > > > > > I see your point that there would be overhead in managing two systems. > > However, I don’t believe that working within JIRA will achieve what > > I’m thinking of. I’m impressed there are people who use JIRA and seem > > to be end users; however, I speculate that these are advanced users – > > edging on developers rather than purely data scientists. There needs > > to be a separation between what the users want and backend > > implementation. An artist doesn’t necessarily tell the rendering > > engineer how to program a photo-realistic renderer; he just says “I > > want it to be easier to do X and be able to better control Y”. I’ll > > keep maintaining the board. You are at least one person that is aware > > of it, and there may be others. I’ve talked with co-workers, and they > like the idea. > > > > > > > > There are two big things I see preventing me from posting\editing > > stuff, if I did: > > > > 1. I don’t have access to edit JIRA > > > > 2. Others may not necessarily agree with my interpretation of the > > issues (I edit the titles and prune to what I think is relevant, which > > is a guess, at best, right now). > > > > > > > > The real thought behind all of this is that the community would use > > the votes on specific cards as direction (or at least give an > > indication of what people are excited about); however, those cards are > > curated by me : /. I’m biased. This is a relatively esoteric project, > > so there is some inherent protection against trolls. > > > > > > > > ---- All I’d ask is that votes could be reflected from this board to > > JIRA; it doesn’t seem like people vote on things, anyway --- > > > > > > > > I do believe that if Zeppelin gets more traction it will become the de > > facto tool for data science within the Hadoop ecosystem. > > > > > > > > Those are my thoughts, > > > > Marko > > > > > > > > From: moon soo Lee [mailto:m...@apache.org] > > Sent: Thursday, June 18, 2015 1:21 AM > > To: users@zeppelin.incubator.apache.org > > Cc: Brian G Durkin; Krishnachaitanya C Potluri; James J Boesger > > Subject: Re: Using Trello to Show Mid to High Level features in Apache > > Zeppelin > > > > > > > > Hi Marko Galesic, > > > > > > > > Thanks for interest to Zeppelin. Also really appreciate for asking > > involvement. > > > > > > > > About the trello you suggested, I checked and looks like you did nice > job. > > > > > > > > In my understanding, beside of JIRA, you'd like to use Trello board to > > get users(who is not familiar with JIRA) requests and feedbacks. right? > > > > > > > > Personally, i think the idea make sense. There're definitely people > > who feels less comfortable of using JIRA. > > > > > > > > However, instead of maintaining separate issue tracking system for > > different target user groups, how about contributing to Zeppelin > > directly to solve the problem. So improvement can be done with Apache > community. > > > > It can be documentation of how to create jira issue, it can be > > discussion of way of managing and organizing issues, it can be anything, > we'll figure out. > > > > > > > > What do you think? > > > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > moon > > > > > > > > On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 3:02 PM Marko Galesic > > <marko_gale...@progressive.com> wrote: > > > > Hi all, > > > > > > > > I’m wondering if people involved with this project would be willing to > > maintain a Trello board for user feature requests. I’d be willing to > > maintain it, however I’d like to know that others in the community > > would market it to those who would use it (users). I’ll be sending > > this to my company’s data scientists. The administration of the board > > should be handled by somebody other than the users, however. > > > > > > > > I’ve started one here: https://trello.com/b/w7KDN7CC/apache-zeppelin > > I’ve taken what seemed like mid-to-high level feature requests and put > > them into “cards”, more on that later. This is a first pass. I’m open > > to feedback + adding administrators since this is really a high level > > reflection of what already exists in the Apache Zeppelin JIRA. > > > > > > > > I’m trying to base it off of what Epic Games is doing with their > > Trello board for Unreal Engine (UE is a video game engine\content > > creation platform for games ranging from small independently developed > > mobile apps to multi-million dollar blockbuster titles that ship on Xbox > and Playstation): > > https://trello.com/b/gHooNW9I/ue4-roadmap > > > > > > > > There are “boards” (e.g. on the one I’ve set up: Interpreters, UI, > > Compatibility, etc), cards (e.g. Hive under Interpreters), card > > tagging (Epic Games uses this for indicating when that card would be > > implemented – specifically, in months), and votes (the board I’ve set > > up is a public board, so anybody with a Trello account can vote). I’ve > > also enabled card “aging”. As a card stays inactive, it starts to > > become transparent. The only card tag right now is “Wishlist/Backlog”. > > > > > > > > This seems more accessible and user relevant than JIRA, and it also > > does not include bugs. If there are performance issues that need a > > ticket, they seem to get labeled as an “improvement” – there are very > > few of those, though, and I’m assuming Epic Games has their own, > > internal ticket tracking system that is much more granular. > > > > > > > > Thank you, > > > > Marko Galesic > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > -- > Kind regards, > Alexander. >