Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on May 7, 2022. It is now read-only.

Tools for engaging a larger portion of the community. #2

Closed
mikeal opened this issue Aug 14, 2014 · 15 comments
Closed

Tools for engaging a larger portion of the community. #2

mikeal opened this issue Aug 14, 2014 · 15 comments

Comments

@mikeal
Copy link
Contributor

mikeal commented Aug 14, 2014

Once we have some initial information from #1 it would be good to find tools that can reach a broader set of users. We'll need to know what questions to ask and how to ask them but I'd love to hear suggestions for tools that can reach an even broader audience than GitHub comments :)

@jonathanong
Copy link

what does this mean? stuff like nan?

@mikeal
Copy link
Contributor Author

mikeal commented Oct 15, 2014

no, more like, and I actually think this is a poor suggestion but I'm just using it as an example: creating a simple survey that is easier to engage with than arguing in issues.

@YurySolovyov
Copy link

There are tons of survey services, and I think invitations to such surveys should be sent from trusted and popular sources, sources(twitter, podcasts etc.), so that many people can participate.

Or you are talking about trying to engage more people to contribute to/discuss node?

@mikeal
Copy link
Contributor Author

mikeal commented Oct 24, 2014

Sure, we can do a survey, but casual users won't fill out a giant survey, which means we'll need simple targetted questions, and not that many of them. So there needs to be a lot of work before a survey where we pair all of this down and create those questions. As of right now, I don't have a lot of great ideas for doing that in an equitable manor that brings in a wide range of users.

@smikes
Copy link

smikes commented Nov 13, 2014

Rather than doing a giant survey, maybe break the survey into manageable chunks and offer a survey link whenever someone is trapped watching the npm spinner. (Would require cooperation of @npm I suppose).

$ npm install
\                _Help move node forward: take a survey while you wait_

@ronkorving
Copy link

I think it should be a lot easier for people to contribute to the documentation. How, I'm not sure. But currently it all goes through the same scrutiny as normal pull requests. Perhaps without the requirement to fax a waiver to Joyent (already done, right?) and a faster commit pipeline (node-forward?), this may just be resolved to some extent. I still can't help but think the documentation could really be improved massively through community input. What tools? I have honestly few suggestions, and I do think keeping the actual docs in git makes sense.

@erunion
Copy link

erunion commented Dec 2, 2014

Github used to send out a yearly survey of about 10 questions asking you on how you use Git. The questions were all pretty simple, and the whole thing took less than a minute to fill out. I can't find any of the survey links in my email history, unfortunately. Possibly someone from GH can chime in?

@sunnyrjuneja
Copy link

Railsbridge used to hold bug smashes to solve issues in rails core. Mentees would spend time researching code and attempting to solve bugs while mentors gave some insight on where to find things. I would love to see a similar model for iojs.

@smikes
Copy link

smikes commented Dec 3, 2014

Railsbridge used to hold bug smashes to solve issues in rails core. Mentees would spend time researching code and attempting to solve bugs while mentors gave some insight on where to find things. I would love to see a similar model for iojs.

That sounds really cool! Maybe that could happen at a biggish community event such as nodeconf?

@vtambourine
Copy link

I believe voting systems can work out, like ones in YouTrack or other issue-tracking services. In that case, all suggestions from #1 must be converted to issues. Users and developers will be able to vote for issues more important from their point of view or suggest new ones to community review.

@Qard
Copy link
Member

Qard commented Dec 5, 2014

@smikes @whatasunnyday At the 2013 nodeconf there was a session helping newbies contribute PRs for bug fixes and documentation changes. Perhaps that could be expanded to a full event. It could even make use of https://nodebug.me/ to evenly distribute the focus. :)

@sunnyrjuneja
Copy link

@Qard That's really cool. I'll definitely take a look at that.

@Nicolab
Copy link

Nicolab commented Dec 14, 2014

Wiki is convenient.

@michaelgrilo
Copy link

Perhaps a collaborative decision making tool like Loomio would go well with the open governance model.

@Trott
Copy link
Member

Trott commented May 6, 2022

Closing all issues in this archived repository.

@Trott Trott closed this as completed May 6, 2022
Sign up for free to subscribe to this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in.
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests