First – apologies to all the forum staff who have contributed to an earlier conversation, that this has taken so long. Advancing years, real life, and occasional health issues have taken their toll and have distracted me. And apologies to all forum members because this conversation should really have started weeks ago. But here it is, and there you are.
So…
Late last year the forum admins (what few are left of us) had a conversation about the future of the forum and, indeed, whether it has much of a one. In essence, there are two big issues:
1 Declining Membership. Although the forum continues to provide a valuable resource for those few still seeking help, and there still exists a core of dedicated helpers, it is a shadow of its former self. We could debate the causes of this until the cows some home and pigs start to fly, but that would achieve little, except perhaps contribute even more hot air to global warming. So let’s look forwards rather than backwards, and see what needs to be done or what can be done.
Related to this, it also has to be said that we have lost several members of the volunteer moderating staff over the last few years, not least from the Forum Council (forum admins) all of whom will be departing in due course.
2 The vBulletin software. We are currently running on a past end-of-life version. We are kept secure by means of the WAF, which itself causes problems, and the combination of vBulletin and SSO was never a match made in heaven.
So why is that a problem? Why not simply upgrade to a newer version?
More than a few years ago we upgraded from vBulletin v3 to v4. It was a time-consuming nightmare - not the upgrade itself, but the way all our bespoke templates, configurations, themes, artwork, etc, etc were broken in the hinterland between v3 and v4, and had to be rebuilt from the ground up by several dedicated volunteers over a period of many weeks. This will certainly happen again. Besides, we do not have the number of people with familiarity of adminCP and, more importantly, all our “bespoke templates, configurations, themes, artwork, etc, etc” who would be needed to do this work.
In my humble, but informed, opinion an upgrade of the current software is not a viable option.
So where does that leave us? Do we simply let the forum die? Do we re-direct people needing help to AskUbuntu? Do we find enough (masochistic!) people to nurse the needed upgrade of vBulletin? Do we lobby Canonical/The Community Council/whoever to build a new forum on better software?
Here are some comments made by forum staff during our recent conversation:
- Askubuntu v forums. Many prefer or need a forum environment rather than Stack Exchange. The two are very different.
- IRC/chat is not a suitable substitute.
- A forum is a useful or essential venue for non-developer users testing a development version.
- We need to have arguments in place in case the Community Council takes the easy option of retiring the forum and simply directing users to AskUbuntu.
- Is the option of building a completely new forum on more up to date software a viable one?
- Several currently active staff members have expressed a willingness to take on leadership roles should a reborn forum be built on new software, or to continue for as long as it is possible that the current software can be kept going.
- What about archiving and making available all the material here?
- Could Ubuntu Discourse be persuaded to launch a technical support section? Note: Ubuntu Discourse currently states:
The Ubuntu Discourse is not a space for technical support. However, the community has a number of platforms where you can seek and provide support.
@staff, if I have omitted or garbled anything do please post. And @membership-at-large, do please post if you have anything to say. This is your forum. What do you want?
As always, when posting please respect the forum Code of Conduct
Footnote: A few notes to counteract some common misconceptions about the forum staff: moderators, super-moderators and admins. We are all volunteers. None of us are employed by Canonical. The Forum Council consists of the admins; the FC’s functions are described here. The forum admins are not sysadmins. Server admin is the responsibility of Canonical.We ... want this to be a place where community can develop and we can enjoy one another's company. To achieve this, we strive to maintain an atmosphere that can be enjoyed by all and we ask all members of the community to be respectful at all times. This means please use etiquette and politeness. Treat people with respect.
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