Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry)
| От | Andrew Dunstan |
|---|---|
| Тема | Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry) |
| Дата | |
| Msg-id | 1421.24.211.165.134.1116406486.squirrel@www.dunslane.net обсуждение исходный текст |
| Ответ на | Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry) (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>) |
| Ответы |
Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry)
Re: Learning curves and such (was Re: pgFoundry) |
| Список | pgsql-hackers |
Tom Lane said: > Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> writes: >> Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> writes: >>> What it comes down to is that a mailing list encourages many-eyes-on- >>> one-bug synergy, whereas Bugzilla is designed to send a bug report to >>> just one pair of eyes, or at most a small number of eyes. I haven't >>> used RT but I doubt it's fundamentally different. > >> Actually RT is quite different. It's very closely tied to email. You >> get all the updates in email and can respond to the emails and the >> results are archived in the ticket. > > [ shrug... ] BZ sends me email too --- for the things *it* thinks I > should know about. > > The basic point here is that these systems are designed on the > assumption that there is a small, easily identified set of people > who need-to-know about any given problem. We (Postgres) have done well > by *not* using that assumption, and I'm not eager to adopt a > tool that forces us to buy into that mindset. > Actually, when BZ sends you mail, it's acting on choices that you have made, or someone at RedHat has made for you. You have a lot of control over what it sends. You want all the email? Tell BZ and you should get it. By contrast with these fine-grained controls, a mailing list offers you one choice: subscribe or don't. Apart from the question of who gets notifications, tracking systems provide some structure and manageability to the data. I find it mildly ironic to see database people eschew the methods of organisation which their own product could help to provide. But all this discussion seems to me pointless anyway - I don't see anybody with enough experience and respect being able to devote enough time to keep a tracking system healthy and useful. And without that we might as well just sit tight. Meanwhile, how about the earlier suggestions related to improving the TODO list a bit (e.g. a "beginner's list")? cheers andrew
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