apt-get install debian-wizard

Insider infos, master your Debian/Ubuntu distribution

  • About
    • About this blog
    • About me
    • My free software history
  • Support my work
  • Get the newsletter
  • More stuff
    • Support Debian Contributors
    • Other sites
      • My company
      • French Blog about Free Software
      • Personal Website (French)
  • Mastering Debian
  • Contributing 101
  • Packaging Tutorials
You are here: Home / Documentation / Contributor Documentation / 7 mistakes to avoid when participating to Debian mailing lists

7 mistakes to avoid when participating to Debian mailing lists

February 24, 2011 by Raphaël Hertzog

You’re eager to start contributing to Debian, your first action is to subscribe to some high-profile mailing lists (like debian-devel and debian-project) to get a feel of the community. You read the mails for a few days and then you find out that you could participate to the discussions, it’s a simple first step after all. True enough.

That said, it’s not as easy as it looks like. There are many mistakes that you should avoid:

  1. Don’t fall in the trap where your mailing list participation is your sole contribution to Debian. If you want people to give credit to your messages, you should already be doing something else for Debian.
  2. Don’t participate more than once a day to a given thread. There are many people subscribed, you should leave room for other people to express their point of view. You can always follow up one day after and reply to several messages at once if you believe you still have something new to add to the discussion.
  3. Don’t reply to off-topic threads. Someone asked a simple question and someone else pointed out that his message was off-topic. Don’t reply, or if you really need to, do it on the correct list or with a private response.
  4. Don’t ask questions unless it’s useful to bring the discussion forward. Development lists are not here to fill the gaps in your knowledge. We already have debian-mentors for this. Furthermore there’s no better way to learn than to find yourself the answers to your questions. 🙂
  5. Don’t believe your opinion is so important. We’re all very opinionated and discussions that consist only of contradicting opinions tend to go nowhere. Thus don’t give your opinion unless you can back it up with new facts or another experience.
  6. Don’t participate to all threads. There are surely some topics where you are more knowledgeable than others, participate where you add the most value and leave the others threads to the other experts (and learn by reading them).
  7. Don’t hide your identity. In Debian we like to know each other. Use your real name and not some anonymous nickname. You need to be able to stand up behind your words, otherwise you’re not credible.

I have myself been guilty of several of those when I started… I invite you to follow my recommendations to ensure our mailing lists remain pleasant to read and an effective discussion place.

You should follow me on Identi.ca, Twitter and Facebook. Or subscribe to this blog by RSS or by email.

Filed Under: Contributor Documentation, Documentation Tagged With: Contributing, Debian, Mailing list

Comments

  1. Seung Soo, Ha says

    February 24, 2011 at 11:26 am

    I would say that most if not all of these points are valid for other mailing lists too!

  2. felipe says

    February 24, 2011 at 12:38 pm

    – don’t send/use html e-mail
    – avoid top quoting (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Top-posting)

  3. frank72 says

    February 24, 2011 at 3:53 pm

    I’m not credible if I don’t like to use my real name online? Really? I always thought it’s important what we do, not who we are…

    • Raphaël Hertzog says

      February 24, 2011 at 6:07 pm

      What you do is important for sure, but if you’re just starting out and don’t have any history then it’s better if you can stand up with your real identity. It shows some confidence in what you’re doing.

      I take some pride from my free software work, and I somehow expect others contributors to do work they are proud to be associated with as well. 🙂

      Hiding your identity leaves the doubt that you could be ashamed of what you are doing.

      • Jon says

        April 3, 2011 at 1:42 am

        For sure this is true but being semi-anonymous in the beginning can help people overcome their insecurity of being newbies.

Get the Debian Handbook

Available as paperback and as ebook.
Book cover

Email newsletter

Get updates and exclusive content by email, join the Debian Supporters Guild:

Follow me

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • GitHub
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Discover my French books

Planets

  • Planet Debian

Archives

I write software, books and documentation. I'm a Debian developer since 1998 and run my own company. I want to share my passion and knowledge of the Debian ecosystem. Read More…

Tags

3.0 (quilt) Activity summary APT aptitude Blog Book Cleanup conffile Contributing CUT d-i Debconf Debian Debian France Debian Handbook Debian Live Distro Tracker dpkg dpkg-source Flattr Flattr FOSS Freexian Funding Git GNOME GSOC HOWTO Interview LTS Me Multiarch nautilus-dropbox News Packaging pkg-security Programming PTS publican python-django Reference release rolling synaptic Ubuntu WordPress

Recent Posts

  • Freexian is looking to expand its team with more Debian contributors
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, July 2022
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, June 2022
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, May 2022
  • Freexian’s report about Debian Long Term Support, April 2022

Copyright © 2005-2021 Raphaël Hertzog