On Tue, Mar 06, 2007 at 07:53:12AM -0700, Bdale Garbee wrote: > I've had some > interesting conversations with developers on three continents in recent > weeks about the power of a vocal minority to influence, distract, and > even disrupt a community operating largely by consensus. My personal > take is that as long as the DPL is actively trying to build consensus, > and acting in accord with the majority of developers, *the system is > working*.
I'd have to disagree, insomuch that when the vocal community makes it extremely difficult for a DPL to do something new, and given the proven difficulty to determine consensus *until* a recall election is forced where the vocal minority was definitively shown to be a very small minority indeed, that there is something badly broken in Debian's governance model. But Debian's dysfunctions aren't SPI's problem --- except that I would strongly urge the SPI board to work extremely hard to get drawn into Debian politics. This is something the SPI board should stay very, very far away from, and the best way do that is to have a single designated project representative. SPI should not stick its nose or try to interpret the politics of any of its projects; Debian is just one very good example why it shouldn't have anbything to do with a project's internal politics. - Ted _______________________________________________ Spi-general mailing list Spi-general@lists.spi-inc.org http://lists.spi-inc.org/listinfo/spi-general