On Sun, Nov 13, 2011 at 12:32 PM, Rahul Sundaram <metherid@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 11/13/2011 11:57 PM, inode0 wrote: >> They are affected by many of the changes. That is why. > > How is a desktop user affected by new clustering technology? You aren't > making any sense to me now Let's start over. User #1 says "Fedora is getting worse each release." User #2 says "You are nuts, Fedora is great. Look at all this innovation - virtualization, clustering, etc." I was pointing out that one problem we have that this demonstrates is two big user communities. Sure they overlap but they are different. Both of the above views of Fedora make perfect sense at the same time. User #1 is from the user base professed by the project to be its target audience. User #2 is more from the enterprise consumer side of Fedora's community. My suggestion was to be more open about the importance of both of these user bases to help resolve the bad communication between them if nothing else. Sometimes innovation is driven by enterprise use cases. Sometimes that innovation affects Fedora users generally, even the ones that don't care about enterprise use cases. While those in our expressed target audience need to understand that sometimes they will be subjected to some things that they really don't care about for the good of the larger Fedora user community. And those driving that innovation need to keep in mind the effect it has on our target base so they aren't overwhelmed by what they see as needless change that is just making their use of Fedora unpleasant to the point they stop. John -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines