We need to remember the majority of "Drupal" the community isn't at Drupalcons. And I'd also second g.d.o is nearly impossible to follow... Sadly this means now I'm brain-storming about community communication again... One of the fun things with a big community like this is letting developers in the trenches who are deploying Drupal, but not working on core Drupal able to keep in the loop with what is going on. --Robin On Mon, Aug 30, 2010 at 3:29 PM, Ken Rickard <agentrickard@gmail.com> wrote:
There was also a session and a BoF at DrupalCON Copenhagen last week, so people could hash this idea out in person.
http://cph2010.drupal.org/sessions/drupal-rights-and-responsibilities
For clients, it is about setting expectations if the client ever intends to interact with the community. If the client filters all their needs through you, then Drupal (in all forms) should be invisible to them.
On Mon, Aug 30, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Jeff Greenberg <jeff@ayendesigns.com> wrote:
Not a stretch at all, but I'm still a little shaky on the intention once you move away from DO. If all the above, when delivering a new site to a client, who hadn't known Drupal from donuts, do we have them raise their right hand and repeat? (Now, that -was- sarcasm, but a serious question is buried within).
On 08/30/2010 10:53 AM, James Gilliland wrote:
Re context of "Drupal" I'd say all of the above. If you're discussing Drupal or in a Drupal related event, or drupal related discussion medium you should be following the DCOC. Its not like most of the items on the list are a far stretch from normal polite behavior anyways.
-- Ken Rickard agentrickard@gmail.com http://ken.therickards.com
-- *R♂bin Monks <http://robinmonks.com>* President, Podhurl Inc. <http://podhurl.us> Drupal Association Individual Member 603.236.7357 <http://www.dandyid.org/id/robinmonks> Live in such a way that those who know you but don't know God, will come to know God because they know you.