-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 8
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Interview partners for research about communication in GitHub projects wanted #79
Comments
Hello @verenya - I'd be happy to have this discussion with you. Perhaps next Friday morning would be convenient? |
Good morning,
thank you very much in your interest. Friday morning (anything before 12:00 CET) would work for me. In which time zone are you working?
Best,
Verena
…--
Verena Ebert, M. Sc.
Universität Stuttgart
Institut für Softwaretechnologie
Abteilung Empirical Software Engineering
Universitätsstr.38
70569 Stuttgart
Fax : +49 711 685-88380
https://www.iste.uni-stuttgart.de/institute/team/Ebert-00004/
From: Paul Wilson ***@***.***>
Sent: Sonntag, 20. November 2022 01:20
To: cyclus/release ***@***.***>
Cc: Ebert, Verena ***@***.***>; Mention ***@***.***>
Subject: Re: [cyclus/release] Interview partners for research about communication in GitHub projects wanted (Issue #79)
Hello @verenya<https://github.com/verenya> - I'd be happy to have this discussion with you. Perhaps next Friday morning would be convenient?
—
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub<#79 (comment)>, or unsubscribe<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/ABPHWORYYTMEM3BZLQQQNWTWJFVBLANCNFSM6AAAAAAR5J224A>.
You are receiving this because you were mentioned.Message ID: ***@***.***>
|
I'm in the US Central Time, so 7 hours earlier than CET. I think before 12 CET will be too early, then. |
how about 11:00 or 12:00 US Central Time then? |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
Hi. My name is Verena Ebert, and I am a PhD student at the University of Stuttgart in Germany.
A few months ago, I have examined 90 GitHub projects to see what communication channels they use and how they write about them in the written documents, for example README or wiki. If you are interested in the previous results, you can find them here:
https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01440
Your project was one of these 90 projects and, therefore, I am interested in further details about your communication setup.
To gather more data about your communication setup, I kindly ask one of the maintainers to do an interview with me. The interview will be about 30-35 minutes long and via Skype, WebEx or any other provider you prefer. The interviews should be done in November 2022, if possible.
In this interview, I would like to ask some questions about the reasons behind the channels, to understand the thoughts of the maintainers in addition to the written information.
The long goal of my PhD is to understand how communication works in GitHub projects and how a good set of communication channels and information for other maintainers and developers looks like. One possible outcome is a COMMUNICATION.md with instructions and tips about which channels could be useful and how these channels should be introduced to other projects participants. Of course, if you are interested, I will keep you up to date about any further results in my research.
If you are interested in doing an interview, please respond here or contact me via email ([email protected]). We will then make an appointment for the interview at a time and date that suits you.
If you agree, I would like to record the interview and transcribe the spoken texts into anonymized written texts. In this case, I will send you the transcript for corrections afterwards. Only if you agree, the transcripts or parts of it would be part of a publication.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: