[Techtalk] [FAQ] Techtalk Meta-FAQ
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Sat Jan 4 20:51:54 EST 2003
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LinuxChix: Techtalk Meta-FAQ
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LinuxChix: Techtalk Meta-FAQ
Val Henson
Copyright (c) 2002 by Val Henson. This material may be distributed only
subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the Open Publication
License, v1.0 or later (the latest version is presently available at
http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/).
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| Revision History |
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| Revision 0.1 | January 2002 |
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| Sent out to issues at linuxchix.org for initial comments |
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| Revision 1.0 | April 2002 |
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Table of Contents
Techtalk Meta-FAQ
Techtalk Meta-FAQ
The latest version of this FAQ can be found at
http://www.linuxchix.org/content/docs/faqs/techtalk-meta.html
This FAQ is posted once every month to the <techtalk at linuxchix.org> list.
Discussion of this FAQ is welcome on the <issues at linuxchix.org> list. It
is offtopic for the techtalk list itself, please do not direct such
discussion to the techtalk list.
The purpose of the LinuxChix project is to provide a friendly,
woman-oriented environment to discuss Linux. The techtalk mailing list
exists primarily as a place for female geeks to ask technical questions
and get answers from other female geeks. Many women posting to this list
aren't just looking for answers to their technical questions, they're also
looking for a peer group and a sense of community with other technical
women.
While techtalk welcomes helpful and considerate people of any gender, it's
easy for the mailing list to become overwhelmed by male voices. As long as
Linux geeks are mostly male, mailing lists about Linux will be mostly
male, so members of the list should expect to see a lot of male voices.
But then, how do we fulfill the original purpose of the techtalk list? We
don't want to kick out all the men, who are productive and helpful members
of the list. One way to keep the list female-oriented is for the men on
the techtalk list to self-moderate themselves to some degree.
How do you self-moderate? When you see a question, stop and think for a
minute before answering. Wait a few hours and give other people a chance
to answer first. It's unlikely that the poster needs an answer within a
few minutes. Consider responding off list, or not at all. If you've been
answering questions a lot lately, take a break and let other people
answer. Examine your motives: Could it be that you race to answer
questions mostly because you want to look smart, and only partly because
you want to help people?
When you do answer a question, include how you discovered the answer. Did
you read a man page? A web page? A book? Did you do a web search? Did the
programmer in the cubicle next to you tell you the answer? Suggest ways to
find out more about the topic under question, independently of the mailing
list. If you were once embarrassed by not knowing the answer to this
question, tell your story. It helps to remind people that even the gurus
were once clueless newbies.
Finally, every time you think about posting, remember that if every
question on the list is answered in 5 minutes or less by a guru, that
discourages every single other person on the list from even attempting to
answer a question. By the time other people have finished reading the
email, the guru has already sent a detailed, jargon-filled answer. We want
to encourage people to participate, not discourage them.
The reason the LinuxChix lists are so popular, techtalk in particular, is
that they do have a lot of women subscribed and as a result, have a
different "feel" to them then normal Linux lists. We all like this and
want to keep it that way. If the list appears to be too male-dominated,
the women who make techtalk what it is will stop participating and start
leaving. Help us keep techtalk a friendly and helpful place!
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