[teampractices] [TOOL REQUEST] A way to "raise your hand" as a remotee
Adam Wight
awight at wikimedia.org
Fri Jan 8 23:25:09 UTC 2016
Hello, interesting mailing list!
Joaquin, this is fantastic and much needed. Thank you for taking the time
to write this prototype! Ironically, I'm reading your letter from the
"skunkworks" unconference session.
One small feature request: a way to flag or reprioritize someone on the
queue, e.g. when the moderator identifies this person as someone who hasn't
spoken yet.
-Adam
On Fri, Jan 8, 2016 at 2:56 PM, Joaquin Oltra Hernandez <
jhernandez at wikimedia.org> wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I've worked on this during the hackathon, and after chatting with Max it
> has the required functionality to work:
>
> http://stack.wmflabs.org
>
> Features:
> * create named rooms (shareable URL)
> * add yourself to the queue (remembers name)
> * one person can add multiple people
> * can pop from the stack (needs human agreement on who will be the popper)
> * plays sound when somebody is added to queue
> * after 5 minutes of stale queue plays warning sound
>
> It's kind of real-time (1s interval polling to server) and it may crash at
> some point, but it gets the job done for now. It's also not really secured
> so a mean user can probably easily crash the server, I'm assuming good
> faith for now.
>
> Open to comments, hope this helps!
> On Sep 22, 2015 08:53, "Dan Garry" <dgarry at wikimedia.org> wrote:
>
> On 22 September 2015 at 08:40, Kevin Smith <ksmith at wikimedia.org> wrote:
>>
>> I had thought about that in the past, but seeing it in this thread really
>> resonated with me. For meetings with a mix of SF and remote folks, I am
>> starting to think that it would be better for all the SF folks to scatter
>> and use individual computers to join the hangout.
>>
>
> This is harder than it seems. It can be quite disruptive to those around
> you to sit at your desk being noisy participating in a hangout, and that
> rules out a large part of the office. I've done this before myself from the
> fifth floor collab space, where there are no permanent desks and some
> semi-private areas, but you cannot guarantee the availability of those
> spaces. When I was remote I often wondered why more people didn't do this,
> but when I moved to the office, I started to appreciate the difficulties
> with it.
>
> Dan
>
> --
> Dan Garry
> Lead Product Manager, Discovery
> Wikimedia Foundation
>
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