Re: Reddit IAMA to support release



On Fri, 2017-09-01 at 23:25 +0000, Sriram Ramkrishna wrote:
We had talked in today's engagement meeting about doing an IAMA in /r/IAMA.  I
was going to do it, but I would of course prefer if we had a group of people
willing to help answer questions.  I figure that we can set some ground rules
about what questions we won't answer.  Although I've noticed that in these
IAMAs people tend to pick and choose anways.

It is a new kind of engagement for sure, but it's worth trying out once and
see what the experience is.  As I said I'm willing to do it, but sometimes I
don't always know what I'm talking about off the top of my head and it would
be nice if people can flag questions worth answering.

I'm thinking I will put myself on whatever queue the IAMA people have.  Let me
know what people think and whether they can help.

sri
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If I can make the time, I'm happy to help answer questions. I know a bit about
GNOME history, being a 1.x -> 2.x -> 3.x "survivor". I don't get offended by
hateful content on the Internet, so I can objectively decide what questions to
ignore or down-vote.

Logistically, if there's a few of us on the team, we might want to be on a
conference call during the AMA to coordinate/discuss what questions to answer.

Are there basic ground rules that the AMA subreddit enforces?

~link

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