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Re: Conducting Research on FOSS communities
From: |
David Arroyo Menendez |
Subject: |
Re: Conducting Research on FOSS communities |
Date: |
Tue, 13 Nov 2018 20:04:29 -0500 |
Thomas Ingram <taingram@mtu.edu> writes:
> On 11/12/18 1:23 PM, Drew Adams wrote:
>
> Note: “community” refers to the FOSS community and the GNU Emacs
> community specifically.
>
> 1. Describe your role in this community.
I'm an advanced user and ocasional developer. I've contributed small
extensions to GNU Emacs, and contributed other scripts and books
translations to the community.
> 2. How long have you been a part of this community?
>
>From 2000
> 3. Why are you involved in this community?
>
I like the GNU philosophy and from my point of view. GNU Emacs is the
best software to understand it. In the beginning was because was a good
free software editor.
> 4. What would you say are the shared goals of your community? (Why does
> this group exist? What does it do?)
>
The goals are shared because there are a license.
The emacs culture is shared, because we share the source.
> 5. What mechanisms do members use to communicate with each other?
> (examples: meetings, email, text messages, newsletters, reports,
> evaluation forms, handbook, etc)
Yes, I've used meetings, email, mailing list, books, telegram, ...
> 6. What are the purposes of each of these mechanisms of communication?
>
The answer is obvious. Meetings to find people in a physical place,
mailing list to comunicate to many people in an asynchonous, irc to
share ideas in a synchronous way, etc.
> 7. How do new members learn about the mechanisms of communication and
> how to use them?
>
In general, a newbie learns GNU/Emacs using Emacs. Although you can read
the Emacs Manual, or receiving a class.
> 8. Are there any shared texts or mechanisms for communication that you
> think are not working well? What do you see as the problem?
>
All is ok
> 9. What are some examples of specialized language that the group members
> use in their conversation and written communication? (examples:
> acronyms, slang, specialized terms that “outsiders” might not understand)
>
https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/Glossary
> 10. How do you help new members learn the specialized language of the
> community?
>
There are many ways depending the person and my motivation.
>
> Hopefully that helps clarify what I'll be asking about.
>
>
> Thomas Ingram
> Michigan Technological University
> Computer Science
Thomas, I've a little article about my experience with emacs-es in
spanish. If you are interested I can attach you.
Regards