On 12-02-29 07:18 PM, Marc Paré wrote: > Le 2012-02-29 11:36, Fabian Rodriguez a écrit : >> On 12-02-29 02:46 AM, Charles-H.Schulz wrote: >>> Le mardi 28 février 2012 à 16:32 -0500, Marc Paré a écrit : >>>> Hi Olivier >>>> >>>> Le 2012-02-28 14:49, Olivier Hallot a écrit : >>>> >> [...] >> >> Heh :) : >> >> http://ask.libreoffice.org/question/63/ask-for-features-new-idea >> >> F. >> >> > The question here though is, will the devs actually visit these pages > often? >
It would be really nice if they did. Several kernel devs hang out on Ubuntu's Q&A site, resulting in very detailed, accurate replies - and the corresponding karma reward. The current seperation wall (in part implemented by the mailing lists) between regular users and devs should not be driven to a bug tracker. > Perhaps, this discussion should really be taken up on the dev list > with devs only and you (the devs) tell us the way that you would > prefer to have suggestions funnelled back to you. We could then refine > the process after we know as to which format the devs would like to > receive the feature requests. > > IMO, I prefer the method we now have of someone proposing a > feature/enhancement on the discussion list where we can all have a > discussion about it and then someone adding it to the bugzilla once it > has been refined. I don't see much value with people proposing > features and the masses ranking it up or down with little discussion. > But this is only my opinion. The discussion doesn't have to go away, quite the opposite. In fact in some questions I've already suggested to bring some topics to the UX mailing list. Here's an example: http://ask.libreoffice.org/question/387/how-can-i-get-a-split-view-of-a-document-like-in > > Ultimately, whether a feature is accepted or not usually rests on > whether a dev will actually adopt it. Our system of meritocracy pretty > well drives the end process. > > This is also a recurring topic on this list, marketing and website > lists. It would be nice if the process could be defined and "wikified". You're mixing up two things here. A dev can adopt a feature (or even implement a feature he wants) directly, but it rests on the community to accept it, not the other way around. Normally a feature would go through such due process, in some cases it may be rejected even if several devs line up to implement it. F. -- -- Fabián Rodríguez -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to discuss+h...@documentfoundation.org Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.documentfoundation.org/www/discuss/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted