Over the last few months on chat.fp.o and at conferences I have started
joining into conversations- listening, asking questions, making assertions,
telling bad jokes.  All this activity has led to a recurring question by
many people in the community, “uhh, who are you?”

Oops, it’s been a while since I was active in Fedora so reintroductions are
overdue.  In short, I am a people manager at Red Hat, responsible for Community
Linux Engineering
<https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org/message/7XGIIO7DEOF7U3MG7VD7LARSWHJBMQMK/>,
everything from the system administrators to quality engineers to the FPL
and many roles in-between: most of the people who work full time in a
community-facing capacity are in my group. This is particularly true of Red
Hatters who are responsible for the combined whole, as opposed to
individual package maintainers.

But this isn’t just an introduction, this is a reintroduction.  My first
foray into the Fedora community, beyond just running Fedora, was in 2012
when my team at Red Hat started to explore the potential for ARM servers.
We, with many of you, bootstrapped armv7hl, then aarch64.  We started with
a Seneca College <https://www.senecapolytechnic.ca/home.html> partnership,
we gave away hardware, we made ugly uboot hacks
<https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/packageinfo?packageID=16154>, ported
hundreds of packages, helped establish the Linaro Enterprise Group to do
more ports & standardization
<https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102858/0200/BSA-and-SBSA-overview>,
and solved seemingly thousands of circular dependencies- and hired a bunch
of great contributors along the way, folks like Marcin Juszkiewicz and Paul
Whalen.  Several of us took what we learned from the experience and
replicated the work inside Red Hat with RHEL 7, first for ppc64le, then
aarch64- two architectures that are mainstream in RHEL today, but scarcely
existed a decade ago.  For me that evolved into driving general RHEL
development as an individual, then management, then last year I had the
opportunity to come back to support Red Hat’s Linux communities in general
and Fedora in particular.

I think it’s fair to say that most of the RHEL management team has, as a
whole, tended to be hands-off in Fedora’s affairs.  There are some notable
exceptions of course, but on average, most people working as managers are
less involved in Fedora.  There’s no written rule about this, so for my
part I’ve inferred that most managers don’t think they have a lot of value
to contribute compared to the people who they manage who are engaged in
Fedora.  Even in writing this blog I feel apprehensive: do I have anything
to say people want to hear?  Maybe just one thing…

Having come full circle, starting a project in the Fedora community,
maturing it in RHEL, learning deeply how RHEL works and shaping it, and now
back in a community space, I believe I have one valuable thing to offer:
insider perspective.  In the coming weeks I will be sharing insights and
ideas.  I’m not sure where it will lead, but that’s part of the fun of
sharing with others, the feedback alters the course. I'd love to hear from
you.

(Dup-posting this to discussion since the audience may vary).

-- 
Brendan Conoboy / Community Linux Engineering / Red Hat, Inc.
-- 
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