21:13:41 #startmeeting 21:13:41 Meeting started Wed Jul 14 21:13:41 2010 UTC. The chair is mchua. Information about MeetBot at http://wiki.debian.org/MeetBot. 21:13:41 Useful Commands: #action #agreed #halp #info #idea #link #topic. 21:13:51 Yes, slightly, argh, working on something else. 21:13:57 #topic asheesh and mel oscon talk braindump 21:14:06 paulproteus: No worries, I was just going to braindump here, so you can read it later 21:14:11 thumbs up 21:14:14 if you pop in and ask q's in the meantime, cool. :) 21:20:56 * mchua has been distracted by expense reports, one sec 21:25:31 Oooookay! Braindumping shall commence. 21:25:53 I'm going to ignore our actual talk abstract and what we talked about last time because I'm too lazy to find/read logs right now (or rather, don't have time) and just yammer off the top of my head. 21:25:57 Junior jobs and bite-sized bugs. 21:26:03 My personal perspective is from a few things: 21:26:12 (1) participant in Fedora and Sugar Labs communities 21:26:18 (2) "community person" for Red Hat 21:26:22 (3) education geek 21:26:53 So I tend to have a very edu-ish, meta-level view of things, as opposed to being a day-to-day coder myself (...at the moment, anyway - I used to do dev, not any longer, I may yet return someday.) 21:27:16 And so I look at that and think "why am I interested in this topic?" 21:28:05 and it's because from my perspective of (1) trying to grow FOSS communities and (2) trying to get academic institutions - and large numbers of students - participating in FOSS communities, we have some blockers (that JJ/BSBs look like a good solution for). 21:28:12 I want to talk about 21:28:13 * dreyfuss model 21:28:17 * bloom's taxonomy 21:28:25 (the wikipedia articles are good for both of them) 21:29:16 * the fallacy of open source being "easy to start in" - it's... open for people to contribute to, but it doesn't mean it's easy 21:29:25 we lose a lot of potential because the things we think *are* easy are *not* easy 21:29:28 tools, etc 21:29:45 see http://blog.melchua.com/2010/07/13/what-foss-communities-can-look-like-from-the-outside/ (2nd part re: irc) 21:29:58 that convo was in here, so some of the folks from this channel (Jefro, notably) will remember it 21:30:41 * mchua tries to zoom into concrete things, tends to do very high-level overviews. 21:33:35 How do we make FOSS participation scale? I think that's the question... how do we design experiences that can teach large numbers of people how to teach themselves how to have that sort of apprenticeship, immersive experience in a FOSS community? 21:35:02 ok, what are these? 21:35:12 21:35:15 Let's prove they work. 21:35:23 21:35:28 (I can hunt for this data) 21:36:43 (we're back in-meeting, I'm going to drop out again) 21:36:46 * mchua wraps up quickly 21:36:54 and then... 21:36:58 "how do you do this for your project?" 21:37:03 21:37:11 I think there are some vital parts to jj/bsbs. 21:37:22 first, the point is to *get* the newbie to interact with a community. 21:37:35 which is a common fallacy - many of us have an engineering mindset, we are trying to automate people out of the system 21:37:41 but the point here is to... almost automate people *in* 21:37:51 because "newcomer is here!" is not a solved problem... each newcomer is a different opportunity. 21:37:54 they can't be automated through. 21:38:34 but we can provide this sort of scaffolding to make it more easy/likely that they'll hit a person. 21:38:46 Because in the end, yes, you're trying to automate the boring stuff... *so* that you can spend more time *with people.* 21:38:59 * mchua jets to team meeting 21:39:01 #endmeeting