The Ecclesiastes principle: Learning lessons of the past

Post on 29-Aug-2014

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We in the technology world often feel that what we're doing is *so* new, we don't have anything to learn from those who went before. And yet, wherever we look, we catch glimpses of wisdom learned in the past which can be applied to open source software development. Dave presents examples from three areas: city planning, architecture and diplomacy, and shows how they apply to the open source world.

Transcript of The Ecclesiastes principle: Learning lessons of the past

The Ecclesiastes principle

Learning the lessonsof the past

Dave Neary, Red Hatdneary@redhat.com / @nearyd

Ecclesiastes 1:9What has been will be again,

what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun.

The Great Frontier

3 examples

ArchitectureCity planning

Diplomacy

Community intimacy gradient

● Public: Forum, public mailing list, ...● Semi-public: IRC, blog comments, ...● Semi-private: Moderated mailing list,

invitation-only IRC channel, BOFs/meet-ups, ...

● Private: Private email, phone, face to face

MixedUses

Professional Amateur

The projects that have been the most successful... are good at all sorts of “soft skills”

David Eaves

Harvard Negotiation Project

● Founded in 1970s● Been used in international peace negotiations,

business negotiations, ...

A typical “negotiation”

I'll give you 40 for it

40? It cost me more! I'll give it to

you for 70.

You're joking! I'll give you 50, not

a penny more! You're a good customer, I could go to 60,

not a penny lessI can go to 53,

but that's all the cash I have with me

Negotiation overview

Interests

Options

Legitimacy

Discussionspace

Relationship Communication

Negotiations in Open Source

● Mailing list discussions● Bug report closed as “Not a bug” and reopened● Patch review● Feature priority● Conflict resolution

Photo credits:Slide 1: CC by-sa 2.0 by doratagold on FlickrSlide 3: Public domainSlides 6-8: “A Pattern Language”, Alexander et alSlide 12: “The Death and Life if Great American Cities”, JacobsSlide 13: CC by-sa 3.0 by revizionist on WikipediaSlide 15: Public domainSlide 16: CC by 2.0. Pencil by taylor.a on flickr, Cassette by victoradrianramia on flickrSlide 18: © David Eaves

Thank you!