On Thu, 22 Jul 2010, R P Herrold wrote:
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010, Charlie Brady wrote:
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010, Charlie Brady wrote:
timeliness *appears* not to be important to the CentOS project, hence this discussion.
Not intended to be a smear - please see timeline @
One person comes to mind who stomped off the project very publicly, and will not be invited back. Their choice. I would not try to stop them, and will respect my relationship with the others who comprise the core of the CentOS process. We may not agree on all matters, but I think that those who remain there all agree that we will celebrate success publicly, and address failures privately
Russ,
If you are talking about me, you are twisting history quite a bit. It's one thing to fiercly stand behind your herd, but it's another if this goes against the goals of the project and benefits/expectations of its users.
Case in point, the core is reduced to maybe 4 active people, there is no governance model, there is no transparancy, internally important matters are minimized and/or delayed (for years!), a lot of (active) people in the community are tired of the (lack of) progress but have no means to do anything about it, I can go on...
The statement that there is a lack of people that want to actively contribute may be true, but if you cannot engage the people that show a willingness to do so, if there is no transparancy and there is no active process for people to contribute, then it's very painful for those people that do want to contribute.
If people are not allowed to speak up (or are being excommunicated if they do) then you are alienating all people that want to actively contribute (even in the core team). This thread is yet another example of that same recurring theme.
And that is exactly what happened to me inside the core team. There was a clear distrust and important matters were _not_ addressed. Those same items are still unaddressed. If I don't feel I am useful in the core team, if I cannot make a difference, if I cannot fix the things that matter to the community, it is my duty to quit. At least it gives the opportunity to someone else to try and do better. If I don't stand behind the project, I cannot stay in a core team in clear conscience and keep my opinions to myself in return for personal benefits. What you portret as a weakness, I consider a great strength.
The fact that you pretend I want to be invited back is laughable, but fits nicely into the excommunicated role you have me play, I guess :-)
PS As a reminder, my resignation letter summarized some of the pain points:
http://dag.wieers.com/blog/leaving-centos-team-not-centos-community
which are still valid today. If I will be known as the guy who couldn't make a blind man see, then so be it ;-)
Kind regards,