David Schuster <dschust1@tx.rr.com> wrote:
If all of these people were sitting in a room together they would have been able to work this out, but due to distance and time communication is harder to achieve.
I don't think distance and time are the problems here. It's more the mentality. software.coop has bought and sold across timezones and distances from Australia to western Canada without serious problems (well, except the US stone-age banking systems), using email, IRC, telephones and more. I doubt the HLT committee are thicker than me. [...]
I know this doesn't look like a business transaction, but for PTFS it is and that is how they have known how to do business in the past. They will need to become comfortable in talking and working with the community but it can't happen over night.
We must not let our Koha community become a business transaction. The community is not something to be bought and sold itself. We must make it independent in perpetuity, don't you think? This is not how to do business with a volunteer community, with NDAs, nighttime conference calls so long that they have agendas and secret approaches to individual participants. I'm not sure it's ever a good way to do business, personally. Whether PTFS becomes comfortable with that is a matter for them. We can show the horse to water, but we cannot force it to drink. [...]
I hope both parties read this and can pull back rethink how this will be approached and try again. We are all very attached to this emotionally so we need to be careful on how we react to postings and emails in a professional manner. I would hate to see this return to the situation we had 8 months ago. At least PTFS was willing to talk with HLT which is more than we had gotten previously.
Professional is overrated - passionate is better. At its core, a professional is someone who professes something because they are paid to do so, a lawyer or advocate being the classic example. I prefer working with people who believe in what they're doing, even if I don't agree with them, rather than an organisation doing things for the money. We should still be polite and civil, though. I think the acquisition of LibLime has set us further back than 8 months ago. In terms of community, we're just a little further on from where we were 16 months ago. Happily, the software has continued moving forwards. Regards, -- MJ Ray (slef) Webmaster and LMS developer at | software www.software.coop http://mjr.towers.org.uk | .... co IMO only: see http://mjr.towers.org.uk/email.html | .... op