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Candidates should add their responses directly on this wiki page.
Please note that not all questions need to be answered, e.g. a FAmSCo candidate should not need to answer very technical questions.

Main questions

What is your take on bundled libraries?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
In my opinion the current policy is the correct approach and should be adhered to.

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
I support our effort/policies to not bundle libraries (and currently fighting with surgery of such a library ;-). The real question is - what can we do if we're not able to unbundle libraries, especially for the first class packages like Firefox and upstream is not responding to our needs. Exceptions should be granted temporary, case-by-case (no free ride for any package) and raised upstream. In case of no reply (one release time?)- we should act even it would mean breaking some features/packages. Top case is Firefox - as I understand it correctly, it's not like they refuse unbundling libraries (some are unbundled already) but some people refuse to do - upstream is probably lacking any policy. I think one, two releases timeframe is ok to make it better.

Marcela Mašláňová - FESCO
There are needed in some specific cases. These packages should be reviewed by FESCO members or FPC.

What ideas do you have related to the implementation of the stable updates vision?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
While I understand the need for stability, I think Fedora is well-known and popular for being bleeding-edge. Many developers and users feel that Fedora is becoming too stable recently and not the place to develop new things anymore. The stable updates vision recommends such users to use rawhide instead but I think that's very often a tad too broken for most people so we'd need something in between, similar to the branches of future releases but implemented as a rolling release like rawhide.

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
I support any effort that makes our systems more "stable". But I don't think current implementation covers everything what's needed as I think it's much more deeper and wider problem - just banning updates does not work (even it can look like from some povs). It goes up to our release process (what is the use for usually not usable Rawhide and two!!! hyper conservative releases out the wild for example?), to our tools - auto qa, auto rebuilds notifications to documentation (all changes has to be properly communicated!). I know it's a big (huuuuuge) task but it's not possible to decouple it -> I don't like current implementation. We are just loosing our flexibility.

Marcela Mašláňová - FESCO
I enjoyed Fedora as developer distribution, so I'm definitely for more updates. If we decided for more stable releases, then we should solve problems of bodhi and update process. We don't have enough testers for all supported releases. Some packages are not tested at all and users are not willing to give feedback in bodhi. Maybe shorter period in testing for non critical updates would be better. We should look for more proventesters, because at the moment they are testing mainly F-14 and F-13 updates are waiting. Maybe F-13 updates should need less karma from proventester or receive karma from F-14 (even this is not the best solution). For proventester there should be some list of important updates waiting for karma (security updates first).

Is there any new initiative you would like to see happen during your term to improve packaging?

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
I'd like to see the same packaging process for pre-review time and post-import time (same process). Now with dist-git I think it's much more feasible. Something like OBS would be nice to have too but I know, manpower...

Marcela Mašláňová - FESCO
I'm looking forward implement 'packaging groups' for SIGs. Instead of giving 'everyone' provenpackager, it could be created group for e.g. KDEdeveloper, Perldeveloper... People in this group could fix any package in group marked as part of particular group. Also support of pseudo-user (how anaconda team use it) could be better, but this won't be needed if groups would be supported.

Do you think it's important to have more people vote in Fedora elections? If so, how would you encourage that?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
Yes, definitely. I would try to increase the awareness of just how important it is to vote in elections but I think in the end the real problem is that people just don't vote even if they now why they should. Probably only some kind of directly connected reward would help to chance that but unfortunately I can't come up with a good idea on how that could look like.

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
The people who cares should vote and votes usually. It's a general problem with all elections - not only in Fedora world. I believe in elections and voting and people should vote even that means my ideas are overvoted. How to encourage? How to bring more people involved? I like the idea of Fedora notification system (for interested people only, not for all users on by default).

Marcela Mašláňová - FESCO
Yes. I missed few votings. There should be sent email about end of nomination period with list of candidates and email about start of voting. Also IRC topics could mentioned it.

Do you run Fedora on the computer you use most often? If so what Desktop? If not, why not?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
Yes, I do - actually Fedora 14 with the lovely KDE desktop is running on all of them: my office workstation, my home workstation (there's also a win7 for fancy gaming purposes on that one, though), my laptop and my netbook.

Marcus Moeller - FAmSCo
Yes, I run the latest version of Fedora (managed with Spacewalk) on my office PC and mixed Versions of Fedora at home.

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
All my systems runs Fedora! No windows, no gates! Except my cell phone that runs Maemo (I should try Fedora...). As a desktop I use Plasma Desktop 4.5 by KDE.

Do you think Fedora should focus on the Desktop? Or someplace else? If so, where?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
Focusing sounds much like we should stop doing what we're good in - to allow everyone to work on everything. I sure think Fedora should focus more on the desktop than on servers, but as long as there's someone thinking Fedora should become the #1 server distribution why stop them working on that goal? Better have some features that only a few people ask for than missing features a lot of people would need.

Marcus Moeller - FAmSCo
Fedora is a good choice for a lot of tasks, e.g. desktops but even servers. If you are in need of running the latest version of http, php or mysql why not stick with Fedora?

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
I'm desktop guy but I don't see desktop and non-desktop cases as mutual exclusive. Even there's no one desktop use case anymore - we have that full-featured desktop environments for your workstation, lightweight ones for netbooks, touch-enabled for tablets, even mobile ones. Same for non-desktop - servers running inside virtual machines, minimal footprint embedded systems etc. What we need is layered platform - the minimal one, even without X-server, the UX one - with X-server, Gtk, Qt, that all spins should implement and build user experiences on top of this base operating system platform. PS: I'm not saying there will be no conflicts!

Marcela Mašláňová - FESCO
Fedora is already oriented on Desktop. There are lot of people using it on server and we should put more work there. I support Server SIG. Packages should have correct dependency because more and more desktop stuff is installed on server and it's not easy to remove it.

What do you think of the Community Working Group that was just established?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
I like the CWGs purpose very much and I offered to serve in it myself. Nevertheless, I'm not exactly sure whether the tasks for the CWG are not actually tasks of the board, the steering committees and the mentors. But the people who decided to create the CWG thought about that already for sure. Maybe a clearer delimitation should be made but I think what the CWG really does and is responsible for will only become clear once it's been actively working for a while.

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
In two and half year in Fedora community, I've never seen any problem requiring CWG intervention (even some cases were on the edge). If someone is willing to take care and run it - I'm not against but I prefer having "welcoming" community where it's not needed.

What if anything would you do about the number of more seasoned contibutors that are reducing involvement in the project?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
Getting Fedora back into a state where things (can) get done and where bleeding edge is lived.

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
I think this is not a problem for us, if these contributitors do not left open source world (-> they left us too). There are many more open source projects than before and it's great.

In one sentence, can you summarize what the Board does and in another what FESco does and in a third what FAmSCo does ?

Sandro Mathys - BOARD
The board works on the vision of Fedora and the strategy to get there (and eventually to implement the non-technical points in the strategy). FESCo works on how to implement the strategy, mostly from a technical point of view. FAmSCo works on the strategy, and supports the implementation of it, regarding the ambassadors' main task which is to promote Fedora locally.

Jaroslav Reznik - BOARD
The Board has an idea, vision etc., FESCo and other teams implements it.

FAmSCo Questions

FAmSCo_questionnaire