Gerald A schrieb:
It doesn't matter where the server is located.
WMDE offers to
reimburse the
person paying for the server. We will not assume any responsibility
for its
operation, or the projects running on it, or the content on the machine.
Ok, fair enough. I did go through the page on Meta, and there was a
reference to
"don't commit beyond 3 months". Is this an experiment for 3 months, or
is it to be
bit off in quarterly chunks? I just don't want to spend a lot of effort
on something
that will only have a 3 month lifespan.
There's no pre-set time limit at all, we don't plan to discontinue the funding
as long as the project works. "Things" may always come up, so I suppose I can
only tell you that we won't withdraw from the project for at least a year (more
likely, we will stick with it for much longer). However, in case it fails for
some reason, it would be bad if someone got stuck for payments for an entire
year. So, don't sign a hosting contract that is binding for more than 3 months,
because 3 month is the max WMDE would continue to pay for in case the project fails.
Ok, we're moving the ball forward now. :)
The "WCR Sessions" had (and will have) a twofold benefit. First, it was
a learning project
in itself, finding out what needed to be done from a technical
perspective, and then putting
it together; and the sessions were information sessions, meant to bring
together various parts of the learning community. We had participants
"call in" worldwide, so from that perspective, I think it was successful.
Sounds good. I'm (supposed to be) on vacation right now, I'll check out the
projects you came up with next week.
Ok. I think we're coming up with guidelines, which
I'm happy to enforce.
In my mind,
there will be a monthly report on all projects. Individual projects MUST
report in at
least every other month, and MAY report every month.
Make that "SHOULD report every month".
If a project
doesn't hit it's
MUST report, it is temporarily suspended until it is brought up to date.
If we have this as part of the signup for a project, we can make it
clear that the
reporting is part of the project deal and hopefully won't have to run
after the contribs
too much.
sounds good.
Agreed. Is there a minimum # you guys are looking to
start with? I'm
willing to help out, to the limits of my time availability, with a
number of projects, but I'd like to see a few others step up and
champion projects too. Project "leads" don't have to be technical to
start a project and write the "progress" reports -- but they'll need to
get someone to commit to helping out on that side.
I'd say three projects with two people committed to each would be a good start.
More are better, fewer might still be acceptable, depending on details.
I just don#t want to have to deal with 6 people
every month about
reporting.
Understood. I think it's best if we have a "primary" contact person (and
perhaps an alternate, just so people can go to the bathroom/do a
vacation/take a wikibreak). 6 people are too much, and if I were in your
shoes it would hurt my head.
exactly :)
I still have a few questions that I'd like
clarified, but I think I
could be the person that moves this forward. Now, we need more projects
and project leaders to make this practical.
Excellent! Let me know when you have all the info.
-- daniel