> So where is the best current place to discuss scaling Commons, and all that entails?

My impression is that we don't have one. All we hear is "it needs to be planned", but there is no transparency on what that planning involves or when it actually happens.

> I'd be surprised if the bottleneck were people or budget

The main problem I see is that we end up in this kind of situation. Scaling and bug fixing critical features should be part of the annual budget. Each line of code deployed to production wikis should have an owner and associated maintenance budget each year. Without this, the team will not even commit reviews - see the thread on wikitech a few months back where a volunteer programmer willing to work on Upload Wizard was basically told "We will not review your code. Go fork."

> Some examples from recent discussions  

Also improvements to the Upload Wizard. There are quite a few open items in Phab on this.

I really hope you will have better luck than others with bringing this issue up in the priority list for next year - multimedia support is growing more outdated by the minute.

Strainu

Pe joi, 30 decembrie 2021, Samuel Klein <meta.sj@gmail.com> a scris:
> Separate thread.  I'm not sure which list is appropriate. 
> ... but not all the way to sentience.
>
> The annual community wishlist survey (implemented by a small team, possibly in isolation?) may not be the mechanism for prioritizing large changes, but the latter also deserves a community-curated priority queue.  To complement the staff-maintained priorities in phab ~
> For core challenges (like Commons stability and capacity), I'd be surprised if the bottleneck were people or budget.  We do need a shared understanding of what issues are most important and most urgent, and how to solve them. For instance, a way to turn Amir's recent email about the problem (and related phab tickets) into a family of persistent, implementable specs and proposals and their articulated obstacles.
> An issue tracker like phab is good for tracking the progress and dependencies of agreed-upon tasks, but weak for discussing what is important, what we know about it, how to address it. And weak for discussing ecosystem-design issues that are important and need persistent updating but don't have a simple checklist of steps.
> So where is the best current place to discuss scaling Commons, and all that entails?  Some examples from recent discussions (most from the wm-l thread below):
> - Uploads: Support for large file uploads / Keeping bulk upload tools online
> - Video: Debugging + rolling out the videojs player
> - Formats: Adding support for CML and dozens of other common high-demand file formats
> - Thumbs: Updating thumbor and librsvg
> - Search: WCQS still down, noauth option wanted for tools
> - General: Finish implementing redesign of the image table
>
> SJ
> On Wed, Dec 29, 2021 at 6:26 AM Amir Sarabadani <ladsgroup@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> I'm not debating your note. It is very valid that we lack proper support for multimedia stack. I myself wrote a detailed rant on how broken it is [1] but three notes:
>>  - Fixing something like this takes time, you need to assign the budget for it (which means it has to be done during the annual planning) and if gets approved, you need to start it with the fiscal year (meaning July 2022) and then hire (meaning, write JD, do recruitment, interview lots of people, get them hired) which can take from several months to years. Once they are hired, you need to onboard them and let them learn about our technical infrastructure which takes at least two good months. Software engineering is not magic, it takes time, blood and sweat. [2]
>>  - Making another team focus on multimedia requires changes in planning, budget, OKR, etc. etc. Are we sure moving the focus of teams is a good idea? Most teams are already focusing on vital parts of wikimedia and changing the focus will turn this into a whack-a-mole game where we fix multimedia but now we have critical issues in security or performance.
>>  - Voting Wishlist survey is a good band-aid in the meantime. To at least address the worst parts for now.
>>
>> I don't understand your point tbh, either you think it's a good idea to make requests for improvements in multimedia in the wishlist survey or you think it's not. If you think it's not, then it's offtopic to this thread.
>> [1] https://lists.wikimedia.org/hyperkitty/list/wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org/message/WMPZHMXSLQJ6GONAVTFLDFFMPNJDVORS/
>> [2] There is a classic book in this topic called "The Mythical Man-month"
>>
>> On Wed, Dec 29, 2021 at 11:41 AM Gnangarra <gnangarra@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> we have to vote for regular maintenance and support for essential functions like uploading files which is the core mission of Wikimedia Commons