Hi David,
I don't think that FAmSCo dicates the conduct of ambassadors,
they speak from experience laying a base for others to follow. Just like
what we are into: OpenSource, it up to us to build upon these guidelines or
bend the rules :-) Personally I think people judge us, the project from the
image we project of ourselves and that is why they insist upon a dressing
code and conduct. I saw an earlier post about ambassadors who don't
understand or support Fedora's basic principles out of ignorance. I presume
much emphasis is not being laid on this matter, people join fedora because
they love the project, it has been of use to them and they wish to make a
significant contribution, hence FAmSco need to play an important role on
educating and supporting the embassadors first.
Amit
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 9:47 PM, David Nalley <david(a)gnsa.us> wrote:
2008/11/10 JoergSimon <jsimon(a)fedoraproject.org>:
> Hi David,
>
> Am Montag, 10. November 2008 16:50:39 schrieb David Nalley:
>> 2. Providing direction - setting guidelines for global Ambassador
>> behavior [1] that isn't culturally intrusive
>
> Can you be more precise, is it related to
>
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Ambassadors/Conduct ?
>
> cu Joerg
>
That is it exactly, Joerg. I don't think that FAmSCo should get into
the nitty gritty of defining things like dress code at events, because
that changes from region to region. That said, things like the page
you set above are apparently oblivious to some Ambassadors. I don't
know if that is a education issue or something else. but given some of
the recent long threads that have occurred on the list, it is an
issue, and something that FAmSCo would seem in the best place to
handle as it seems to transcend regional boundaries.
Thanks,
David Nalley
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