[Openstack] Fwd: [Infra] administration of new mailinglists

Duncan McGreggor duncan at dreamhost.com
Tue May 29 15:34:52 UTC 2012


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Monty Taylor <mordred at inaugust.com>
Date: Tue, May 29, 2012 at 11:24 AM
Subject: Re: administration of new mailinglists
To: Stefano Maffulli <stefano at openstack.org>
Cc: Thierry Carrez <thierry at openstack.org>, Duncan McGreggor
<duncan at dreamhost.com>, Michael Tietz <tietz at b1-systems.de>, Christian
Berendt <berendt at b1-systems.de>, "James E. Blair"
<corvus at inaugust.com>




On 05/29/2012 11:13 AM, Stefano Maffulli wrote:
> On 05/26/2012 11:38 AM, Thierry Carrez wrote:
>> That's a valid point (my point was about the topic of the list, not so
>> much about its location). I'm not really attached to the LP setup, it's
>> more a question of disruption for our existing users, but the benefit
>> might be worth it.
>
> I don't think there is an easy way to migrate over 2000 users from one
> place to another but I also think that we should have one place for all
> the lists, ideally.
>
> Moving those subscribers will not be an easy task, so I would consider
> that a project in itself. We should move this discussion to the public list.
>
>> That said, I still think there is value in a "default" discussion list,
>> separate from the development list. I guess we could have:
>>
>> openstack at l.o.o - default discussion about openstack - present-looking
>> openstack-dev at l.o.o - development discussions - forward-looking
>> openstack-operators at l.o.o - "operators" (??)
>
> I like this setup, so we don't have to change names/addresses. We can
> keep openstack@ on LP until we have the new l.o.o up and running.
> Migrating will be complicate.
>
>> We would rename "operators" to "users" and encourage current subscribers
>> to join it.
>
> I don't see the value in renaming the list. Why would you want to create
> this pain for the current subscribers?
>
>> Two questions: how do you merge the old archives with the operators
>> archive ?
>
> which old archives?
>
>> And for "announce": who gets the right to post to it ? Or
>> rather, who gets to moderate the posts to it ? PPB ? PTL/relmgr ? Any
>> volunteer ?
>
> You'll have to work very hard to convince me that an announce list is
> worth the trouble :) 'Tradition' is not a good argument.
>
> First of all, it's not clear to me *who* would need to send out
> announcements. Can somebody start from there?
>
> I'll start enumerating why I don't think such list is needed by
> community managers:
>
> - more lists, more policies, more complexity for newcomers, things that
> they need to learn.
> - more lists, more policies, more complexity to manage (moderators, spam
> masters, etc)
> - the announce list has not been used for over 8 months, nobody noticed
> - multiplying contact points for people increases the need for
> cross-posting, more messages
> - an announce is fundamentally a one-way communication, no need to have
> 'discussions' around it, mailing list is the wrong tool *today* (it made
> sense in the 90s)
> - an announce sent to a mailman list is fundamentally shouting in the
> wind: there might be people listening, you'll never know if they heard
> something. A *segmented* (developers, operators, business folks)
> newsletter is the best way to send out announcements.

I agree with this about the announce list. Announcements these days are
usually done via some combination of blog/rss/twitter.




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