On Thu, 2008-01-31 at 21:29 -0500, Ron Teitelbaum wrote:
From: Ken Causey
On Thu, 2008-01-31 at 19:18 -0500, Ron Teitelbaum wrote:
Hey Ken,
-----Original Message----- From: Ken Causey
I guess what I'm saying is I suggest immediately querying the community for questions that they want nominees to answer, perhaps collecting them on a wiki page. Then the elections team should have a reasonable period of time to edit those and cull them down to a reasonable selection and present them to the nominees. The original page of questions should be kept and nominees should be welcome to add any questions from that page to the questionaire, say at the end, and answer them. Similarly of course the nominee should feel free to add their own questions and answers to the form. Of course they should be encouraged to answer all of the questions in the original questionaire, but I see no reason to forbid not answering some of them.
That all sounds fine, except that when I asked last time I go only a few responses. I'm all for setting up a wiki page like last year. I just don't think there will be much response. I'm watching the Democratic debate now maybe that would be a good idea. I wonder if we couldn't get some high profile members to ask questions on IRC? That would be fun.
I suggest going through the motions on a questionaire anyway. If the community only comes through with two questions, then those are the two questions the community would like the nominees to address, fine. The primary point is to give the community the opportunity, the result is in some sense secondary.
Regarding an IRC event. You're right, that could be fun, I've done one or two before. However, witness the current battle to find a time that 4 people (Edgar DeCleene, Matthew Fulmer, Keith Hodges, Colin Putney) are going through to find a time that they can all meet and I think you will find that any realtime event among a worldwide group is always difficult and at best short of being complete (in terms of attendance). Don't let that discourage you though, in my opinion it's the election team's job to do a reasonable minimum of work to make these sorts of things possible, really its the community's responsibility as a whole to take advantage and the election team should accept any criticism and try to accomodate it, but in the end it's just a matter of doing the best job that just one or two people (the election team) can manage in their spare time.
Yes, and no, I'm working on it but it is going rather more slowly than I had hoped. If you have received any more requests about password resets by email, have them email me directly (either my personal email address or the box-admins mailing list). If I end up having to do any by hand again, I need those original emails so I have some confidence that it is the actual account holder requesting the reset. If you would please go ahead and have Laurance Rozier email me directly.
In fact if you send out an email regarding elections prior to the point at which I say that the automated password reset mechanism is ready, then instruct anyone who has misplaced their password to email box-admins@lists.squeakfoundation.org with a password reset request making sure to include their SqP account name in the email.
Terrific that sounds good.
It would be nice if we could announce the election tomorrow. It would be good to wait for Göran to read the emails approve and announce all this.
Thanks Ken for all your work and for participating!
Sure. I'm good with what I have heard so far. If you don't mind I would like an opportunity to proofread any official email you send out, when there is time. If nothing else a quick list of the points to be covered would be good that way I can at least confirm that you are covering what I think needs to be covered. ;) In this case and in any case if you will be working on something like an email where you would like commentary/proofreading then I suggest that you just notify the list as soon as possible so that those of us like myself that would like the opportunity are aware that we may want to check email at times where we don't tend to do so normally.
Ron
Ken