[Ubuntu-ni] [Importante] Miembros oficiales de Ubuntu-NI

Cecilia Reyes M lafieramarina en yahoo.com
Vie Jun 29 03:47:05 BST 2007


Hola a todos.
Aqui esta firmado mi CoC. Si les contara la odisea que
fue firmar esta cuestion.... pero bueno, al menos aqui
esta el resultado final.
Ciao!
LFM


5436 
  2007-06-29: digitally signed by Cecilia Reyes
Membreño (1024D/2A328333) 
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 = Ubuntu
Code of Conduct = This Code of Conduct covers your
behaviour as a member of the Ubuntu Community, in any
forum, mailing list, wiki, web site, IRC channel,
install-fest, public meeting or private
correspondence. The Ubuntu Community Council will
arbitrate in any dispute over the conduct of a member
of the community. '''Be considerate.''' Your work will
be used by other people, and you in turn will depend
on the work of others. Any decision you take will
affect users and colleagues, and we expect you to take
those consequences into account when making decisions.
For example, when we are in a feature freeze, please
don't upload dramatically new versions of critical
system software, as other people will be testing the
frozen system and will not be expecting big changes.
'''Be respectful.''' The Ubuntu community and its
members treat one another with respect. Everyone can
make a valuable contribution to Ubuntu. We may not
always agree, but disagreement is no excuse for poor
behaviour and poor manners. We might all experience
some frustration now and then, but we cannot allow
that frustration to turn into a personal attack. It's
important to remember that a community where people
feel uncomfortable or threatened is not a productive
one. We expect members of the Ubuntu community to be
respectful when dealing with other contributors as
well as with people outside the Ubuntu project and
with users of Ubuntu. '''Be collaborative.''' Ubuntu
and Free Software are about collaboration and working
together. Collaboration reduces redundancy of work
done in the Free Software world, and improves the
quality of the software produced. You should aim to
collaborate with other Ubuntu maintainers, as well as
with the upstream community that is interested in the
work you do. Your work should be done transparently
and patches from Ubuntu should be given back to the
community when they are made, not just when the
distribution releases. If you wish to work on new code
for existing upstream projects, at least keep those
projects informed of your ideas and progress. It may
not be possible to get consensus from upstream or even
from your colleagues about the correct implementation
of an idea, so don't feel obliged to have that
agreement before you begin, but at least keep the
outside world informed of your work, and publish your
work in a way that allows outsiders to test, discuss
and contribute to your efforts. '''When you
disagree,''' consult others. Disagreements, both
political and technical, happen all the time and the
Ubuntu community is no exception. The important goal
is not to avoid disagreements or differing views but
to resolve them constructively. You should turn to the
community and to the community process to seek advice
and to resolve disagreements. We have the Technical
Board and the Community Council, both of which will
help to decide the right course for Ubuntu. There are
also several Project Teams and Team Leaders, who may
be able to help you figure out which direction will be
most acceptable. If you really want to go a different
way, then we encourage you to make a derivative
distribution or alternative set of packages available
using the Ubuntu Package Management framework, so that
the community can try out your changes and ideas for
itself and contribute to the discussion. '''When you
are unsure,''' ask for help. Nobody knows everything,
and nobody is expected to be perfect in the Ubuntu
community (except of course the SABDFL). Asking
questions avoids many problems down the road, and so
questions are encouraged. Those who are asked should
be responsive and helpful. However, when asking a
question, care must be taken to do so in an
appropriate forum. Off-topic questions, such as
requests for help on a development mailing list,
detract from productive discussion. '''Step down
considerately.''' Developers on every project come and
go and Ubuntu is no different. When you leave or
disengage from the project, in whole or in part, we
ask that you do so in a way that minimises disruption
to the project. This means you should tell people you
are leaving and take the proper steps to ensure that
others can pick up where you leave off. -----BEGIN PGP
SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (GNU/Linux)
iD8DBQFGhHA1wkQvNioygzMRAp3uAJ9Xhj6Jed5sfAU+iGED23O0D0umggCgmJ+a
Kl1gWKC1UEOvYDREOqIV4RA= =6mWv -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----






       
____________________________________________________________________________________
Sick sense of humor? Visit Yahoo! TV's 
Comedy with an Edge to see what's on, when. 
http://tv.yahoo.com/collections/222



Más información sobre la lista de distribución Ubuntu-ni