[Openstack-personas] Personas project in Launchpad?
Liz Blanchard
lsurette at redhat.com
Tue Feb 18 13:21:01 UTC 2014
On Feb 17, 2014, at 7:49 PM, Kruithof, Piet <pieter.c.kruithof-jr at hp.com> wrote:
> I’m wondering whether we should change the name to the UX Project since the scope of the team is slowly evolving into other areas (such as usability). For example, I’m thinking that we may want to a Card Sort to understand how users conceptualize the Horizon info architecture.
There is already a UX project in launchpad that we should take advantage of here. I think it’s the first step to get everyone working on UX stuff together :)
https://blueprints.launchpad.net/openstack-ux
You’ll notice there are already blueprints for the work we had planned to do early on for horizon personas, triple personas, and user community testing. Additionally there are blueprints for things that we’ve talked about like IA improvements and navigation enhancements are already here. Please feel free to edit these blueprints or take ownership of anything that you might be working on that doesn’t have an owner.
Thanks,
Liz
>
> Piet
>
>
>
>
> From: Nick Chase [mailto:nchase at mirantis.com]
> Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2014 7:43 AM
> To: openstack-personas at lists.openstack.org
> Subject: Re: [Openstack-personas] Personas project in Launchpad?
>
> +1
>
> ---- Nick
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 13, 2014 at 9:16 AM, Dave Neary <dneary at redhat.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Would there be interest in having a personas project in Launchpad?
>
> This would have a few benefits:
> * Source control to version control the various documents we'll be
> working on
> * Bug tracker to enable issue tracking
> * Committers would be considered ATCs and get Design Summit invitations
> and free Summit passes, where we can attend & evangelise Personas to
> developers
>
> Using Launchpad for the third benefit is kind of a hack - there's no
> good way to get official recognition of time & effort spent working on
> personas (and other non-technical subject areas like marketing,
> documentation), but using source control to track things provides a nice
> easy way to do so.
>
> Anyone interested? If so, anyone know what's involved?
>
> Thanks,
> Dave.
> --
> Dave Neary - Community Action and Impact
> Open Source and Standards, Red Hat - http://community.redhat.com
> Ph: +33 9 50 71 55 62 / Cell: +33 6 77 01 92 13
>
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