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----- Original Message ----

From: Charles Marcus <CMarcus@Media-Brokers.com>
To: discuss@documentfoundation.org
Sent: Thu, November 11, 2010 10:29:53 AM
Subject: Re: [tdf-discuss] FreeDesktop Bugzilla

On 2010-11-11 9:47 AM, Rainer Bielefeld wrote:
the current bug tracking  system is sufficien for expert communication,
but if masses of users  will file their problems, we will loose overview,
soon. There are too  less sort criterias for subcomponents, OS-Versions,
LibO version and and  and, afaik we don't have an useful permissions
management ... . I'm  afraid we will run into problems. Is there any
discussion concerning  solutions for these problems?

'Masses of users' will not know how to  properly report bugs.

As I have advocated in the past (on this and the  OOo list), I would
suggest a two-tiered system - a simple bug reporting page  for end users,
where they can report bugs, document format/compatibility  problems and
feature requests. This page should simply require a validly  formatted
email address, and should not require the user to create an account  or
'log in' to anything.

Mozilla resolved the issue for Firefox/Thunderbird by having a multi-tier 
system:

1. If you are reporting a feature request, then yes you need an account to their 
bugzilla to enter it.
2. If you are reporting crashes, then Firefox/Thunderbird bring up a special 
crash dialog for the user to enter what they were doing and any other comments 
when the crash occurred; it then takes care of submitting things per process.

This seems to cover most use cases. The majority of users will not care about 
feature requests - just making it so it doesn't crash.
Those that do care about feature requests should probably be required to login 
to bugzilla; in the alternative, I'd suggest that they first be forced to 
communicate with the developers who can then enter a bugzilla request and CC 
them.

As I mentioned, this seems to work pretty well for Mozilla and their various 
projects. Gentoo does the same; though they also follow the alternative.

And yes, I've submitted bugs to both projects and have gone through getting 
accounts - it's really not that much of a hassle to do. If you really wanted to 
make that less of a hassle, then integrate OpenID or something similar for the 
bugzilla login - since Yahoo, Gmail, Facebook, and numerous others support 
OpenID, compatible, and similar methods - so users would be able to use their 
e-mail to login and not have to worry about passwords; at the same time it keeps 
the system clutter free from bug spamming since not just anyone could enter a 
bug, those that do can be tracked, and spam-bots could be denied.

$0.02

Ben


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