Homer Parker posted <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, excerpted below, on Mon, 12 Sep 2005 19:20:15 -0500:
> On Tue, 2005-09-13 at 15:55 +0900, Chris White wrote: >> So basically, Simon wants arch testers to become official devs (with >> limited >> restrictions). They've taken the staff quiz already, and he wants them >> to be >> officially @gentoo.org-ified and _read only_ access to the portage tree. >> If >> they want read/write access they do the usual stuff to become a dev and >> all >> is happy. > > Minor clarification, they currently take the ebuild.quiz.. We're > working on one more QA/testing related.. Which of course will go before > everyone to be kicked around before implementing. This relates to the voting question as well. I'm looking at being an AT, but am taking it slow (HP would probably say glacial, at this point =8^). [1] Looking at the quiz, there's a *LOT* on there about the organization and stuff that I really hadn't expected. This would be good for voting, but IMO, ATs really shouldn't need /either/ all the org questions /or/ voting privs. As someone else mentioned, one of the reasons ATs decide /not/ to become devs is because they aren't interested in all the organizational politics involved. So... I'd say scrap at least some of the organizational questions (in the new AT quiz), and by the same standard, do NOT allow ATs to vote. It's a fairly short step from AT to dev for those that want it, for voting or tree level write access anyway, and I don't believe the AT role needs voting privs. Gentoo mail addresses would be a nice touch. Official would be nice, whether that means "staff" (perhaps specifically defined in the GLEP as staff without voting privs, if the above is taken), or officially-recognized non-staff, doesn't matter to me, anyway (it might to some ATs). RO (no write needed or indeed wanted, here) tree access would likely be the most useful feature being proposed, however, as I've already bumped into that "impatient waiting" problem with rsync, and I'm not even doing serious AT type testing as yet. [1] It's worth noting that "slow but steady" is a defining characteristic of my personality. It took me 3 months to switch to Linux, and another three to switch to Gentoo, after I'd decided to go for it. In both cases, however, there was no going back, and I had and practiced the knowledge many others take years to build. Likewise with AT, it's taking me months to get there, but I expect I'll be good at it when I get there, and likely stay AT for a year, maybe two or more, before I even consider full dev, if I do so at all. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman in http://www.linuxdevcenter.com/pub/a/linux/2004/12/22/rms_interview.html -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list