On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 4:38 AM, Pine W <[email protected]> wrote:

> The Newsletter extension could be useful in all kind of ways, and I
> was glad to see that it's apparently still in active development.
>

Oh yes, check  https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/project/profile/888/

It would be helpful for me to have proposals shown in the newsletter
> divided by approximate time horizon (next week, next month, next
> quarter, etc), as well as their status (proposed but not in
> development, in development, stalled, ready for review by (insert team
> here), deploying soon, under discussion, deployment complete on X
> wikis and deploying to Y soon, etc.)
>

If that UX Review checkpoint would be created (something that needs to be
decided by the Product teams who would maintain it)...

... that information would be available in the UX review checkpoint (a
regular wiki page, updated as reviews come and go).

The UX Review newsletters would consist on something a lot lighter:

* A title, i.e. "New WikiEtc design concept looking for reviews"
* A URL where the news would be explained and discussed.

These newsletters would arrive to users via Echo and/or email notifications
-- their choice via their Preferences.

In other words, there is no need to "write a newsletter". The Newsletter
extension just collects and advertises existing pages.


What would it take to get a newsletter like that launched, when might
> it happen, and who should coordinate and publish it?
>

As a promoter of the Newsletter extension, I feel co-responsible (with Tony
Thomas, lead developer and a lot more) for deploying it in Wikimedia
(getting there, it has been available in the Beta cluster for a while now).
If you are interested about this event, please subscribe to
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T110170

Once the extension is deployed, if the idea of checkpoints has been found
interesting indeed, we could start with a pilot. Note that setting up the
checkpoint and the newsletter is relatively easy. The complex part is to
define a reliable process followed by everyone. This is why I would put the
words "experimental" and "pilot" upfront.

-- 
Quim Gil
Engineering Community Manager @ Wikimedia Foundation
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/User:Qgil
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