Previous meeting item #1: "let's try to have room meetings more often". Well... That didn't go so great. We forgot to have the second quarter meeting. Let's try extra hard to do better in Q4.
To that end, I have already established a tentative date for the next meeting: November 19. Now that we've got a target, it will be harder to let it slip by
Previous meeting item #2: "the room is a bit cliquey, can we do something about that?". Status: indeterminate. The user makeup is about the same as it was before. We're still trying to be welcoming to newcomers. This is both difficult to measure, and to come up with actionable solutions for.
Item #3. "Could there be a lower proportion of gold-badge users in this room than in other rooms. Is this the case, and how do we fix it?". No action taken yet. Another hard-to-measure metric. If anyone wants to volunteer to throw some data analysis elbow grease at this, I'm all ears.
Item #4. "'Trash' is kind of a blunt name for the room we send trashed messages to. Can we change that?" Status: yep. Since naming it the "Python Ouroboros", I haven't heard any complaints. Perhaps in lieu of getting mad, users are just baffled? I consider this an improvement.
Cant force people to stay. People who comes in to ask their question, ends up leaving since their question got answered (until the next time they have another question). Only a hand full actually decided they wanted to stick around.
There are several very talented/knowledgable people in this room whose talent is not proportional to there rep or gold badge status. I think that is a reflection of the quality of this community and the python community at large. Meaning, many here don't care about rep as much as contributing to a fruitful community.
Also, there are many gold badgers I'd rather not be hanging out here
I know of at least one prominent gold badger (Jean-François Fabre) who cannot access Chat on their work computer. I assume he's not the only one. But I also get the impression that he's not that interested in being a regular visitor of this room anyway
I think it's also harder to earn rep these days in terms of quality of question. Also attracting high rep / gold badges seems kinda irrelevant, why did we wan't to be focused on their reps in the first place (the answer I might have missed in last meeting).
Previous Meeting Item #5. "What can we do to make trashing gentler?". I think we've made some progress on this. We try to give correctional tips to the recipient, and make them understand how the room is improved when they try a little harder to format their messages properly. I can recall two or three instances where the user even asked for the messages to be trashed before we took action. That's a great sign of not having any hard feelings.
Switching from "move the messages, then explain the problem" to "explain the problem, then move the messages" seems to have been an important change
addressing the point where Wim said that python's user base has been growing but this room's population hasn't been; I wonder if it's because Python's resources for beginners and medium level of users are that great that most newcomer don't need to seek out extra help (ie come to our chat room)
Also there's probably some critical mass where chat becomes less useful the more people are in it, and maybe we're at some local stable point. Who knows? We're not sociologists.
Previous Meeting Item #6. "Is inlined image uploading getting out of hand?" We adopted a "wait and see" approach to this one. I don't think there were any particularly disruptive events between then and now. (I've personally been hyperlinking my own gifs since then, which probably accounted for 90% of them :-P)
@coldspeed these are parts of a broader current item #1: earlier orders of business. Kevin's leaving some time to discuss. Still we see late remarks :P
I haven't seen as many gifs so I haven't had to hide the page on my work desktop until it pass, which is nice. I still enjoy the cute pictures though so I think we are heading in the correct direction.
Same, I've been super busy so haven't been in the room much, but I've noticed fewer things that need to be cleaned up. I think this is typical of Summer though, there's usually an uptick of lower quality posts around this or next month.
The problem was not that we were linking images, it was that there were particularly large ones or animated ones. Small images are fine (content matters though), and youtube thumbnails are about the same size.
I read/participate in the Python SO chat at work, which is acceptable (programming related), but the thumbnails of these music videos make it look like I'm in some kind of an anime chat room. It's not a good look for me or, presumably, others that use SO at work.
A couple regulars do occasionally post their music selection. At the very least, we can make it known to them that some have expressed a preference for hyperlinks. Even if we don't resolve to make it an official policy.
There's all sorts of content that can be posted, so singling out youtube seems odd. If you're concerned with images or oneboxed content in general, adblock can block those divs fairly easily and is probably a safer bet overall.
I think that is collectively what we are concluding is that in general we have agreed that there hasn't been any abuse of one-boxing so we don't need to hammer anything down right now.
Also, I think the last time I was involved in people sharing NSFWish anime type pictures we squashed that down quickly and I never saw it again
Previous Meeting Item #7. "Let's write up a summary of what was discussed during the Q2 meeting, and add it to the transcript page on the sopython.com site." We didn't get around to this. I'm reading from a rough summary that was prepared a couple of days ago, but it's not publicly available anywhere. I'm hoping we'll do better for this meeting, since it's been less of a dog & pony show so far :-)
I don't think this is a huge issue, since the transcript is still publicly available. All the information is there for anyone to peruse. It's just unfiltered.
And we're also reviewing it now. But at least a brief outline in the transcript summary would be nice, for nothing else but to make our "previous business" next meeting easier.
Final Previous Meeting Item: "We'll open up the agenda for the next meeting, which as always can be edited by any user with >= 100 rep". Status: partial success. We did open the agenda, but only one week ago. Ideally, everyone would have an entire quarter to propose topics.
I intend to put up a stub page for the Q4 meeting immediately after this meeting concludes.
Navigating to the wiki from the chat room is arduous enough that you probably won't be at the peak of your rage when you finally get to the edit panel ;-)
OTOH, I think we do need some mechanism to handle situations when room visitors (whether casuals or regulars) have a serious grievance relating to the room. We don't want to create a Situation in the room itself, but we still need a way to deal with that sort of feedback fairly and swiftly.
@PM2Ring Isn't this room the best place for that kind of thing though? Serious grievances usually affect the entire room, not just the person who's making the complaint.
We used to have an email, but no one ever used it and I couldn't maintain it when moving servers. I can add a GitHub issue to add a private feedback section to the website.
@Aran-Fey Fair point And that can work if people keep civil. But that's not always easy when emotions are running high. And some people can discuss stuff easier when there's a degree of privacy.
We can provide it as a form on sopython.com, and have it posted somewhere else that is not email based which might make life easier for the managing part @davidism
@wim to a point I'd agree, but after a level of escalation it's often better to occupy oneself with something else. When either or both parties are agitated there's not much room for an objective discussion
I wouldn't want ongoing arguments in the room that lead nowhere
which is also why we often freeze the room for half a minute or so when we assess that continuing the discussion would make it even worse
I feel like we're dipping a little bit into New Item #3, "Disputes with an RO and how to resolve them constructively." I guess it's fine to go through the Items out of order as long as we hit them all at some point.
A private channel like that is a bit like a fire extinguisher. You don't expect it to get used very often, but you're glad it's there when you need it. :)
I would like to see a conflict resolution step between "bring up your grievance with the RO who you think is doing wrong, right then and there" and "wait to raise your grievance at the room meeting"
Let's clarify. Are we talking about "private channel to protect someone with a grievance", or "separate channel to protect the main room from meta-discussions and heated arguments"?
I think transparency is pretty nice to keep people in the loop kind of thing. If they want privacy could they not create a new account just to raise their concern?
Perhaps. But I suspect that 99% of the time stuff that doesn't need privacy can easily be done in room 6 itself. So there isn't a lot of point in having a non-private meta room.
If we don't get a meta room 6, then we must be allowed to have discussions here in this room. If there's no place where having discussions about this room is acceptable, then something's wrong.