<div dir="ltr"><br><div class="gmail_extra"><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">I shouldn't have to write a paragraph...</blockquote>
<div><br>There are many bibles in this world naturally. I go with proven experience ------- asking volunteers to write a friendly paragraph has proven to be the singlemost effective community-building tool in my 6 years with OLPC, as people in the almost 300-volunteer <a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Support_Gang">http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Support_Gang</a> community remind me every day. It increases friendly communications and brings fantastically thoughtful dialogue as documented by open source practices here --- to keep both a public and an intimate side to all creative communities:<br>
<br></div><a href="https://www.theopensourceway.org/wiki/Communities_of_practice#Develop_both_public_and_private_community_spaces">https://www.theopensourceway.org/wiki/Communities_of_practice#Develop_both_public_and_private_community_spaces</a><br>
<br><div>My urban planning community design friends were my inspiration for this lucky success we've achieved here. Alongside beautiful public gardens (like <a href="mailto:server-devel@lists.laptop.org">server-devel@lists.laptop.org</a>) the singlemost effective tool that I've found to help deployments, and build constructive communities, is to nurture a friendly and intimate space (similar to Walter & Claudia's great weekly learning meetups on irc, and Australia's <a href="https://www.yammer.com/australianxoteachers/">https://www.yammer.com/australianxoteachers/</a>) precisely for the central reasons Sameer lays out so clearly below. In short, teachers and deployment folks especially, deeply needing compassion, de-escalating public drama, serving the global good without their 9-5 boss interfering, and avoiding the everpresent "MALE" list culture so common in certain parts. That stifling mailing list culture that Chris Ball powerfully reminds us crowds out female & shy participation by those who keep grabbing the megaphone to seize their moment global stage. Real deployment work begins patiently on the phone, as Daniel Drake explains better than all. The next steps are private and public forums, for all the reasons Sameer lays out:<br>
</div><div><br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">and if you all<br>
haven't caught on as yet, we are *not* dealing with a technology<br>
problem! This business of building a dozen different server projects<br>
is a people problem.</blockquote><div><br></div><div>Anyway for all the above reasons everyone who is welcome to join <a href="mailto:xsce-devel@googlegroups.com">xsce-devel@googlegroups.com</a> if they want a low-flame environment, to work on the hard human problems around school server communities of all kind! We are 30 people and haven't had to kick out any loudmouths yet, and hopefully we never will have to. I do remember when I was 10 years old when I too refused to write a paragraph for any teacherm N.osy S.illy A.uthority, etc -- so I understand Sameer's preternatural nervousness perfectly. But writing a paragraph won't kill any of us I've concluded. In fact blogging might save us all, according to Bernie Innocenti who explained this to me eloquently -- around <a href="http://planet.laptop.org">http://planet.laptop.org</a> 's wonderful diversity of opinions! So all who want a deployment-level discussion of school server communities, XSCE, <a href="http://internet-in-a-box.org">http://internet-in-a-box.org</a> etc, just send me any couple sentences on why you care and that's all there is to it ------- sure I don't promise you'll meet lifelong soul mates, but Let's Say You Just Might :-)<br>
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