> On Wed, Apr 23, 2003 at 02:31:53PM -0400, Guido van Rossum wrote: > > I read this interview in ACM's *Ubiquity* which reminded me of the > > Python developer community. Seems we are doing some things right. > > Maybe we can learn from it in cases where we aren't. > > He seems to be talking more about Governments (and treating > companies as governments b/c the people can't or don't want to > leave) and knowledge workers broadly. Well, he specifically points out that the US government is an inappropriate model, and suggests instead to use the government of ancient Athens as a model. Then he goes on to point out several properties of that community that I think match our community pretty well: (1) Shared communal values, including moral reciprocity; you get professional or personal growth in return for your contributions. I think many developers contribute and learn something from the review of their code by others. (2) Structure, a body for debate, dialogue, and decision-making. "The organization is the people." In our case: mailing lists, PEPs, SourceForge, CVS. (3) Specific practices: the right and expectation of *participation*; *consequence* or *accountability*: if you decide something, you have to do the work; *deliberation*: resist partisanship; *merit* as the basis for decisions; and *closure*: debates shouldn't go on forever and once a decision is made, everyone is supposed to get on board. I think all those things match our way of working pretty well! > A better comparison would be Habitat for Humanity (and voluntary > associations in general). [...] Maybe. I get lots of junk mail asking for contributions from HforH and frankly I've always thought of them as yet another charity: there are lots of these, and most of them are so much larger than our community that comparison is difficult. IMO these large charities in general (maybe not HforH, I don't know anything about them because on principle I never open unsolicited mail) are too much like modern-day massive governments already: they typically have a leadership who, like politicians, would do anything to keep or improve their personal position. I hope that's not true for the Python developer community. Certainly my own motivation is the fun I have here and not personal gain!!! --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
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