I like this solution.
I'd also like to see these lists, and how to subscribe to them posted
publicly and in a way that is intuitive to find / execute.
--Lincoln
On Mon, 2009-09-21 at 14:16 -0400, Dan Allen wrote:
On Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 7:00 AM, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
On 18 Sep 2009, at 00:09, Dan Allen wrote:
Our first choice for request #1 is to allow all
subscribed members of the jsr-314-open list to post,
with moderation of a person's inaugural post
(webbeans-dev uses this approach, for instance). The
second choice would be to have a separate list open to
the community. In either case, both lists should
satisfy request #2.
My preference would be for there to be two email lists, both
with public, non-password-protected, archives. The first is
the EG list. The second is the a discussion list. A regular
member of the EG can post unmoderated to either list. Any
subscriber can post to the discussion list. If a member of the
community is an expert on a particular sub-topic, we should
pull them into the EG list, using moderation to allow their
posts through.
After considering the three alternatives presented here, I'm in favor
of Pete's suggestion. It gives the community a place to speak more
freely, without having to knock at the EG's door directly, so to
speak.
When we identify a community expert, we should say that we will
"invite" them to the EG list, as hopefully they will see it as a
priviledge and honor.
The important point, though, is that a person does not necessarily
have to be on the EG to be allowed to post to the EG list. Otherwise,
we will just have too many people trying to be on the EG for no other
reason than to post.
-Dan
--
Dan Allen
Senior Software Engineer, Red Hat | Author of Seam in Action
Registered Linux User #231597
http://mojavelinux.com
http://mojavelinux.com/seaminaction
http://www.google.com/profiles/dan.j.allen
--
Lincoln Baxter, III
Co-Founder of OcpSoft
Creator of:
PrettyFaces: URL rewriting for JSF
PrettyTime: Java elapsed timestamp formatting