[Board] [OSGeo-Discuss] OSGeo is becoming irrelevant. Here's why. Let's fix it.
Jeff McKenna
jmckenna at gatewaygeomatics.com
Fri Sep 25 22:27:53 PDT 2015
Before anyone over-reacts here, I will say some words. I travel to many
events, small, and big, and promote OSGeo and FOSS4G, all over the
world, to any place on this planet. I can tell you that the community,
including our projects, has never been so stable and strong, and, there
is a vibe that hasn't been there in a long time. Recent events like
FOSS4G-Seoul, FOSS4G-Asia, and FOSS4G-Como have really made so much
momentum, and the spirit is so alive. I think it is about knowing who
we are (we make great Open Source geospatial software and build strong
communities) has really helped OSGeo. And yes, we've guided FOSS4G for
over 10 years, and built it into an industry powerhouse. We share, we
are open, we have fun.
Do we sometimes make mistakes? Yes sure. You mentioned many
issues/challenges/mistakes. I do look forward to working with you in
the foundation on these.
But I couldn't be more proud of the OSGeo community right now.
I would take this moment to thank Sanghee specifically, the chair of
FOSS4G-Seoul, for raising the bar for FOSS4G - there has never been so
many promotions of OSGeo in a FOSS4G event before, so many special
sessions, MoUs (even with the U.N., sorry I haven't had time yet to
report all of that). Sanghee and the Korean local chapter deserve so
much thanks.
I wish everyone could go to Asia and see these chapters in action (such
as the Korean chapter or Japan chapter), but not everyone can make that
trip from places like Europe and NorthAmerica. So let me try to tell
you, we/OSGeo are relevant and we are doing great things, both locally
and globally.
I can't even put into words what OSGeo's involvement in GeoForAll has
done globally, it is quite amazing to have all these schools actively
promoting Open Source geo (and I can tell you directly that OSGeo has
benefited from working closely with the partnering organizations ICA and
ISPRS).
I also am thinking of the offlist excitement of new/forming local OSGeo
chapters in Belgium and Finland, as well as Ireland (off the top of my
head).
And I know many local chapters are in the planning stages for their next
local FOSS4G events in the coming months: Hungary, Belgium (first
ever!), Argentina, Japan (whose OSGeo-JP chapter holds 3 events each
year, amazing).
Wow, phew, I need to take a breath ha. But the attendees of the recent
FOSS4G events all left feeling rejuvenated, excited, passionate, and
looking forward to the year ahead for OSGeo and the community. I spoke
with several OSGeo board members in Seoul and we all agreed on that.
I'm all for change and 'fixing', but I just wanted to keep positive and
yes, be proud of our hard work (yes, none of this is easy, for a
foundation made entirely of volunteers).
Yours,
-jeff
On 2015-09-25 4:57 PM, Darrell Fuhriman wrote:
> The recent discussion on the board list
> <https://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/board/2015-September/013172.html>that
> came out of the question of the 2014 videos has got me thinking about a
> few things again, and I want to try to get them out there.
>
> Grab a mug of your favorite liquid and hunker down, because I put some
> time and effort into this, and your own well considered reply is
> appreciated.
>
> Keep in mind that all of these comments are coming from my personal
> perspective, which, like everyone’s, is an incomplete picture of the
> whole. Much of what I’m going to say has been rolling around my head for
> a while, so I’m just going to put it out there.
>
> I will start with a provocative thesis:
>
> OSGeo lacks visionary unified leadership and without it will become
> irrelevant.
>
> Of course, making such a claim requires support. So let me break down
> the statement.
>
> “Visionary leadership” is really two things, “vision” and “leadership.”
> I will address each in turn.
>
>
> OSGeo lacks vision
>
> I looked at the list of “Goals” for OSGeo
> <http://www.osgeo.org/content/foundation/about.html>. I wonder: when was
> the last time these goals were evaluated for both success and relevancy?
>
> Here is my own opinion of success of some of these goals. (In the
> interest of brevity, I haven’t tried to tackle everything. That’s left
> as an exercise to the reader.)
>
>
> Example 1
>
> To provide resources for foundation projects - eg. infrastructure,
> funding, legal.
>
> Allow me to break each of those examples down.
>
>
> Infrastructure
>
> It’s true that OSGeo provides some infrastructure, such as Trac
> instance, Mailman, SVN repos. If the budget is to be believed, we pay
> some $3,500/yr to OSUOSL for said infrastructure. I wonder if such a
> service is necessary, however. Issue tracking and source control are
> much better provided by Github, which is free for organization such as ours.
> I say this because a) that’s money that could be better spent elsewhere
> and b) supporting these services burns precious volunteer time (more on
> that below).
>
> There are clear cost savings available, which are not taken advantage
> of. For example, OSGeo could be hosting FOSS4G infrastructure:
> conference websites and registration, a central location for conference
> videos (regardless of platform/provider). This neglect is especially
> galling given that FOSS4G is OSGeo’s sole source of income.
>
>
> Funding
>
> OSGeo does not fund projects. It has provided some funds to pay for Code
> Sprints — $15k in 2014 according to the budget
> <http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/OSGeo_Budget_2014>.
>
>
> Legal
>
> I see nothing that has been done on this front recently. Please feel
> free to correct me.
>
>
> Conclusion
>
> OSGeo, where it actually does what it claims, has not adapted in ways
> that could save money.
>
> My grade: D
>
>
> Example 2
>
> To promote freely available geodata - free software is useless without data.
>
> The geodata working group is dead. As near as I can tell by perusing the
> mailing list archives, and the wiki, there has been no meaningful
> activity in the past two years (maybe more).
>
> My grade: F
>
>
> Example 3
>
> To promote the use of open source software in the geospatial industry
> (not just foundation software) - eg. PR, training, outreach.
>
> The Board of Directors
> <http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Board_of_Directors#Packaging_and_Marketing>page
> says:
>
>
> Packaging and Marketing
>
> OSGeo’s marketing effort has primarily been focused around the packaging
> and documentation efforts of OSGeo-Live, and to a lesser extend[sic],
> osgeo4w. […] It has been entirely driven by volunteer labour, with 140
> OSGeo-Live volunteers, and printing costs have been covered by local
> events or sponsors. In the last couple of years, OSGeo has covered local
> chapter expenses required to purchase non-consumable items for
> conference booths (such as a retractable banner). In moving forward,
> OSGeo hope to extend marketing reach by providing co-contributions
> toward printing costs of consumable items at conferences, such as toward
> OSGeo-Live DVDs.
>
>
> Local Chapters
>
> Much of OSGeo’s marketing initiates are applied at the local level. In
> many cases, this is best supported through as little as an email list
> and wiki page. OSGeo also supports local chapters by offering to pay for
> an Exhibition starter pack for local chapters. Local chapters are also
> usually the coordinators of conferences and related events, as mentioned
> above.
>
> Exhibition starter packs almost never happen; OSGeo-Live explicitlygets
> no support; and OSGeo struggles to staff a booth at its own conferenceto
> say nothing of any other conferences.
>
> Note: Local chapters certainly do do marketing and outreach, but these
> efforts are essentially unsupported by the OSGeo Foundation. In fact,
> this goal and the Board of Directors webpage seem to be explicitly
> contradictory.
>
> My grade: F.
>
>
> Commentary
>
> I could go on with my own personal evaluations, but I’m not sure that’s
> necessary. The only place I see that OSGeo has unquestionably succeeded
> in the past few years is the final goal, “To award the Sol Katz award
> for service to the OSGeo community”.
>
> So, what’s my point here? It’s simple: there is no longer a coherent
> vision for what OSGeo should be. I’ll return to that below, but let me
> continue with my other point.
>
>
> OSGeo lacks leadership
>
> Again quoting the Board of Directors’ page:
>
> The board’s primary responsibility is to efficiently and effectively
> make strategic decisions related to the running of OSGeo.
>
> I won’t bore you with the details, but a perusal of the board meeting
> minutes would indicate that strategyis rarely, if ever, a part of the
> meetings.
>
> The emphasis on consensus-based decision making often leads to no
> decisions being made. I can’t count the number of discussions that have
> come up on the board list only to devolve into a morass of nit-picking
> and eventual lack of action when everyone tires of the discussion. What
> action that is taken is often to “delegate” to a (possibly inactive)
> sub-committee, then never follow up.
>
> Instead what we have is a great deal of inertia, little interest in
> changing things, and no clear indication of what the Board’s priorities are.
>
> If priorities do exist, they’re lost in a maze of confusing, incomplete
> and often contradictory information on the wiki. (Wikis — like
> abandonware for documentation.)
>
>
> On pending irrelevancy
>
> I encourage you to ask some random people in the open source geospatial
> community what OSGeo means to them. I would make a bet that the most
> common answer is a blank stare.
>
> I would ask the board members to come up with three things, other than
> FOSS4G, where the OSGeo membership has shown its importance to the
> community as a wholein the last two years. Something where people say,
> “Did you hear about[exciting thing]OSGeo is doing on X?” To be clear, I
> don’t mean just things that OSGeo has a finger in, but things that
> needOSGeo. If OSGeo disappeared tomorrow, would any of these projects be
> significantly affected?
>
> I don’t think it can be done. The OSGeo Foundation is sliding into
> irrelevancy — and it may already be there.
>
> If anything should be seen as strategic for OSGeo, it’s FOSS4G, the
> foundation’s primary (sole?) source of income. Even regarding its
> flagship public event, the board is largely absent. Rather than provide
> adequate resources and planning, they instead rely on burning out
> volunteers, then make post-hoc demands on the way they shouldhave done
> it, provide no future support for organizers to heed those demands,
> rarely follow up, then go on to repeat the same mistakes the following
> year. Honestly, it’s surprising that FOSS4G has failed only once. (I
> think this is a reflection of the demand for the conference, not the
> blazing competence of OSGeo.)
>
> Michael Gerlek brought this up
> <https://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/discuss/2015-July/014521.html>on the
> osgeo-discuss list in July, and probably has a more generous spin on it.
> He essentially argues that it’s time to declare mission accomplished and
> shut down or rebooted. I agree with his points, and I’m arguing that
> OSGeo can have something to offer, but it will require a major re-think
> of its mission.
>
>
> Fixing things
>
> I hinted at this in my recent questions to the board candidates, but I
> want to be explicit here: OSGeo needs to evolve or die.
>
> Here’s how I would do it:
>
> 1.
>
> The board needs to evaluate all of its goals, as defined on the
> About page, to decide if they are still truly goals. Define any new
> goals.
>
> 2.
>
> Ask the question: “What does it mean to succeed at this goal?”
>
> If the goal is vague, or ongoing, give a timeline: “What does
> success look like for this goal one year from now?”
>
> 3.
>
> Create measureable objectives for achieving those goals. Ask the
> question, “How will we know if we’ve succeeded?”
>
> 4.
>
> Prioritize the goals.
>
> 5.
>
> Allocate resources to the goals.
>
> Obviously this is a tricky one, but I think we can look at this a
> balance between Importance and Effort.
>
>
> Spend money to reduce to the effort required, more money if the goal
> is more important — this might be the hardest cultural shift.
> Volunteer time is precious and easily discouraged. Make sure that
> you make it as efficient as possible by spending money when you can.
>
>
> For example, many of the infrastructure services OSGeo provides can
> be easily outsourced to more featureful services that are more
> responsive and rely less on volunteer labor.
>
> 6.
>
> Close the loop on tasks. When a task is delegated to a committee or
> individual, track its progress, both to know that it is or isn’t
> happening, and to be able to acknowledge and incorporate the work
> when it’s done. Failing to acknowledge people’s labor or to use the
> results of that labor will virtually guarantee that the volunteer
> does not continue to help.
>
> 7.
>
> Evaluate success and failure. GOTO 1.
>
> Aside: none if this will happen without a strong executive. Whether that
> position is paid or not is up to the board, but it’s clear that there
> needs to be someone who can make decisions without endless rounds of
> fruitless discussions. The board as currently constituted is not
> dysfunctional, but it is mostly afunctional.
>
> I’m will go so far as to suggest this: Fly every board member who is
> available to a two or three day retreat. Get everyone in the same room,
> a professional facilitator to speed the process, then figure out what
> OSGeo is going to be and how to get there. Don’t fret excessively about
> the expense — this isn’t about saving money, it’s about saving OSGeo.
>
> If you ask me, irrelevancy is a fate worse than death. Be bold!It’s
> better to try to do something big and new then fail than to simply fade
> away and be forgotten.
>
> Though my comments above may sound harsh, they are sent with the very
> best of intentions. I want OSGeo to succeed, but OSGeo is never going to
> succeed if it doesn’t know what it’s try to succeed at.Without real
> reform, I don’t see success happening, just irrelevance. Here’s hoping
> this gets the ball rolling.
>
> Darrell
>
>
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