JuhaSiltala
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I have been active in the Ubuntu community since its inception in 2004. Since then, I have remained active within the IRC community, helped with bugs, participated in discussions, and promoted Ubuntu and free software locally and globally. I am a member of the IRC Team. | I am a 39 year old Finnish guy, a reseacher, a musician, and a freedom lover. I have been active in the Ubuntu community since its inception in 2004. Since then, I have remained active within the IRC community, helped with bugs, participated in discussions, and promoted Ubuntu and free software locally and globally. I am a member of the IRC Team, and an Ubuntu project member. |
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For entertainment, I can provide images of my [[http://dl.dropbox.com/u/213546/happy-topyli.jpg|happy summer face]], my [[http://dl.dropbox.com/u/213546/workspace.jpg|workspace]] at home, and my [[http://dl.dropbox.com/u/213546/Screenshot-091130.png|Ubuntu desktop]]. |
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I am a member of the Board of the [[http://flug.fi/|Finnish Linux User Group]] (FLUG) since the beginning of 2009 and was re-elected for 2010. I deal with and support our LoCo people also in this role. In 2009, I was Chairman of the Committee to choose the winner of the annual Linux-tekjä (Linux Contributor) award of 2009. | For the life of me, I cannot possibly even remember when i became a member of the [[http://flug.fi/|Finnish Linux User Group]] (FLUG), but I accepted a positition in the board of the LUG in the beginning of 2009 and was re-elected for 2010. I deal with and support our LoCo people also in this role. In 2009, I was Chairman of the Committee to choose the winner of the annual Linux-tekjä (Linux Contributor) award of 2009. |
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=== Future plans for IRC work === IRC is our primary real-time support and community discussion forum. We need to realize its unique potential for openness, immediacy and community building. I believe we will achieve this with general guidelines and careful selection of operators and IRC Council team members, rather than strict written rules or technical measures. Clear operator qualifications and strong support from existing ops are essential for new member nominations, and respect between operators is the basis for smooth conflict resolution. From the experience and evidence I have gathered from studying, and working with, free software projects and other open organizations, I know that conflicting interests, conflict resolution and the resulting learning are powerful sources of development and innovation. An activity where all contributors have a stable consensus is not learning. I believe that the Ubuntu community should also learn by encouraging friendly disagreement, and not be afraid of conflict. I would like to join the IRC Council and try to help this happen. My technical knowledge of IRC is not complete, and my time is limited by sleep, work, and friends in the flesh. However, I believe that my experience as probably one of the most senior citizens of the Ubuntu IRC world, and my understanding of open organizations, peer-based projects, and distributed work will earn me some support as I nominate myself. |
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* It has always been a pleasure to interact with toplyi, and to observe his interactions with others. His informed yet approachable demeanor combined with a calm and patient manner has been an excellent asset to the Ubuntu IRC ops team, and is an excellent reflection of the Ubuntu ethos for new users. +1. - KurtvonFinck (mneptok) | * It has always been a pleasure to interact with topyli, and to observe his interactions with others. His informed yet approachable demeanor combined with a calm and patient manner has been an excellent asset to the Ubuntu IRC ops team, and is an excellent reflection of the Ubuntu ethos for new users. +1. - KurtvonFinck (mneptok) |
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* Topyli is a valued community member to me. Available to provide solid support advice and disscussion, provides objective input to discussion and contributes valuable input to help take Ubuntu community data such as wiki pages, IRC Factoids, forward. His contribution as an IRC operator is very good and is a good person to use as an impartial sounding board. I would support Topyli gaining membership status. -- Matt Darcy === Comments on IRC Council nomination === |
I am a 39 year old Finnish guy, a reseacher, a musician, and a freedom lover. I have been active in the Ubuntu community since its inception in 2004. Since then, I have remained active within the IRC community, helped with bugs, participated in discussions, and promoted Ubuntu and free software locally and globally. I am a member of the IRC Team, and an Ubuntu project member.
Many people know me better as topyli online.
I have a Launchpad page. I signed the Ubuntu Code Of Conduct in March 2006.
I work at the Center for Activity Theory and Developmental Work Research, University of Helsinki, as a researcher and a grad student. My work concentrates on the organization of distributed work, particularly of large free software projects and firm/community relationships.
For entertainment, I can provide images of my happy summer face, my workspace at home, and my Ubuntu desktop.
History of contributions
Community and support
In 2004, I was a Debian user increasingly frustrated by the slow (at the time) progress of new stable GNOME versions into Debian Sid. I first heard about a new, very gnomish distribution that would always release right after GNOME, on GIMPnet's #gnome-hackers. I soon got a copy from no-name-yet.com, and as soon as I found out about Freenode's #ubuntu channel, I joined. Over there I spent a lot of time in the early years discussing Ubuntu, supporting newbies (my Debian knowledge put to good use), and of course learning a lot.
I cannot remember exactly when #ubuntu became too big for general community chat and #ubuntu-offtopic was created. I joined there as well, and never left. I did, however, eventually leave #ubuntu in favor of #ubuntu-fi, the support channel of my LoCo team.
I joined the IRC operator team in late 2008. Despite frequenting numerous Ubuntu channels, I am one of the few "offtopic-only" operators on the team. I only work on #ubuntu-offtopic (and #ubuntu-fi-offtopic). I see it as my responsibility as a senior community member to work for a pleasant atmosphere in the lounge areas of the Ubuntu project, to welcome newcomers, and to try and show them how the community works.
I infrequently create a web comic based on witty or funny dialog heard on #ubuntu-offtopic, titled 'tales from the offtopic' on my blog. It is the most popular feature on my web site. Other popular topics have been
- HOWTO-like articles on mobile devices and GNU/Linux. Fortunately, these are rarely needed with Ubuntu these days
- Desktop organization and productivity tutorials
- Semi-political features on software freedom.
All in all, the site is not a major bandwidth hog.
LoCo and marketing
I am active in the #ubuntu-fi support channel, and an operator and cheerleader in #ubuntu-fi-offtopic. Historically, I have been less active in official LoCo business than I would have liked, but recently I have become more visible there as well.
For the life of me, I cannot possibly even remember when i became a member of the Finnish Linux User Group (FLUG), but I accepted a positition in the board of the LUG in the beginning of 2009 and was re-elected for 2010. I deal with and support our LoCo people also in this role. In 2009, I was Chairman of the Committee to choose the winner of the annual Linux-tekjä (Linux Contributor) award of 2009.
I am a very active Ubuntu evangelist both locally and in the international academic world. I started my ongoing academic work on free software and open development models around 2002. I like to think my work has raised interest and awareness there as well.
Technical work
I have never written a line of code for Ubuntu or any other project in my entire life. I have never fixed a single bug in any piece of software.
I do report bugs quite often though, in both Ubuntu and upstream, and do my best to assist those who eventually do fix them. Specifically, I file wishlist bugs when I find usability problems, desktop inconsistencies or suboptimal design. I also encourage others to do so instead of just complaining.
Future plans
I am becoming even more active in my LoCo. I have an immediate opportunity coming up in the form of next year's aKademy conference, which will need support from both Ubuntu-fi and FLUG. I will continue my work on the IRC community and the IRC operators team. I want to push Ubuntu more actively in the Finnish public sector and education through evangelism, academic work and consulting.
I hope I can recognize as many opportunities as possible for making Ubuntu a little bit more awesome as they come by. Because they always do.
Future plans for IRC work
IRC is our primary real-time support and community discussion forum. We need to realize its unique potential for openness, immediacy and community building. I believe we will achieve this with general guidelines and careful selection of operators and IRC Council team members, rather than strict written rules or technical measures. Clear operator qualifications and strong support from existing ops are essential for new member nominations, and respect between operators is the basis for smooth conflict resolution.
From the experience and evidence I have gathered from studying, and working with, free software projects and other open organizations, I know that conflicting interests, conflict resolution and the resulting learning are powerful sources of development and innovation. An activity where all contributors have a stable consensus is not learning. I believe that the Ubuntu community should also learn by encouraging friendly disagreement, and not be afraid of conflict.
I would like to join the IRC Council and try to help this happen. My technical knowledge of IRC is not complete, and my time is limited by sleep, work, and friends in the flesh. However, I believe that my experience as probably one of the most senior citizens of the Ubuntu IRC world, and my understanding of open organizations, peer-based projects, and distributed work will earn me some support as I nominate myself.
Community cheers
"topyli has been advocating Ubuntu in our IRC channels for as long as I can remember. He recently became a member of the IRC Team and has consistently shown good judgment when dealing with troublesome users" -- BenjaminRubin
Juha/Topyli is an excellent contributor to the Ubuntu ops. He has a cool head and is a big plus to have on the ops team. I heartily endorse Juha's membership application. --JussiSchultink
It has always been a pleasure to interact with topyli, and to observe his interactions with others. His informed yet approachable demeanor combined with a calm and patient manner has been an excellent asset to the Ubuntu IRC ops team, and is an excellent reflection of the Ubuntu ethos for new users. +1. - KurtvonFinck (mneptok)
Juha is a much appreciated contributor in the Ubuntu community and a very reliable person to work with. His work as an Ubuntu-ops has always shown him as clam and cool headed, not taking decision in a rush and you can feel he is fully committed to find the best solution for all parties involved. I strongly support his membership application. -- MyriamSchweingruber (Mamarok)
- Topyli is a valued community member to me. Available to provide solid support advice and disscussion, provides objective input to discussion and contributes valuable input to help take Ubuntu community data such as wiki pages, IRC Factoids, forward. His contribution as an IRC operator is very good and is a good person to use as an impartial sounding board. I would support Topyli gaining membership status. -- Matt Darcy
Comments on IRC Council nomination
JuhaSiltala (last edited 2015-10-19 17:59:28 by topyli)