I have *So* many thoughts on this topic as I have been thinking about it
for literally years and didn't know there was a formal place to bring it
up! I'll try and only bring up a few thoughts at a time and see what others
raise, but please let me know if I'm going on cuz this is a topic I
*really* care about.
1. Information in General
People have a desire to follow projects with different amount of attention
and with different levels of interest. So there need to be different
channels to address these levels of interest. Blogs are very good for
people who want to know the big things, get announcements. I use the
add-ons blog as my example of an ideal situation. The way they write their
blog posts are *amazing,* informative, easy to read, but not too burdensome
on the writer. I think they also get the right content. It's also split up
into the appropriate feeds so someone can follow all, or just the jetpack
updates for example. I would love to see this be some sort of Mozilla
expected standard.
But others do want to follow all the discussion. They want to see where
they can jump in or actively get involved in building the project. "In the
beginning" there were newsgroups for this, and they fulfill certain
purposes very well. Purposes that are key IMO to Mozilla's mission. Anyone
can follow the discussion and participate in it. They can participate at a
time that is convenient to them. They can skim or skip certain
conversations that don't appeal to them and move on to the ones that do.
>From what I can see, too much is being pushed into phone meetings. The
discussion about the CoC is a great example of how I think things should be
done to protect Mozilla's values of inclusiveness. There has been a lot of
discussion going on, with many views and issues raised. I have changed my
views, or acquired views on things I didn't think about before. At this
point I would feel confident to have a real time meeting to review and make
some decisions on the issues being faced. I would also feel confident that
if I didn't make that meeting my views had been represented and taken into
account. Could you imagine if Mitchell and Deb and a couple others had
just scheduled a meeting and written us a Code of Conduct?
1. Newsgroups
I touched on this above, but they are really important as they are
currently the only tool we have that allows *all* the community to access
*all* the information. I think part of the problem is thinking of them as
newsgroups. For myself I find them very easy to use as mailing lists. I
subscribe, and I make filters so they don't go into my inbox. I catch up on
them when I have the time. Google groups is a *pain* as Robert (sorry
forget which one!) mentioned in another thread. In an ideal world we'd have
some sort of system that allowed you to follow discussions based on tags
and keywords so you didn't have to follow a whole newsgroup. Forum software
does this, but I'm not sure which ones have good email interfaces. You
don't think it at first, but being able to just read and reply from email
is a *huge* convenience. I currently subscribe to the SUMO contributor
forum via email, but I still have to open the site (and possibly login) to
add thoughts.
Though I'm not saying all activity *must* happen on the newsgroup. If a
small group has an inspired conversation on IRC (or in person!) it's not
hard to recap the conversation and put it to the newsgroup/mailing list to
check for more opinions.
I'm a little worried when it's employees deciding not to use these
standard/common tools as well. Those of us in the "greater" community have
had to adapt to them to be part of Mozilla (I hated newsgroups at first,
too, but now I love the mailing list aspects esp for focused projects like
hackasaurus and ReMo). There should be the same expectation for people who
are even more fortunate to be paid and in positions of power over the
projects. Especially if it's not being replaced by a similar and equally
accessible tool... which would be awesome to see.
-Majken "Lucy" Connor
> There is a degree of paradox in discussing making the Mozilla forum
> sufficiently accessible to those who are not currently contributing to
> the forum, in the forum itself. I am not convinced that it is
> technological accessibility so much a the structure, depth and speed
> of discussion that is prevent many Mozilla employees from
> participating (of the group of employees called out by Asa as not
> being able to contribute, the one I represent, product marketing, was
> held up as the prime example).
>
> It therefore seems like a sensible next step, that I poll that group
> and return here with any observations, and perhaps other groups
> identified could do the same.
>
> Patrick
>
>
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