- From: John Foliot <john.foliot@deque.com>
- Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2018 13:27:21 -0500
- To: Chris Wilson <cwilso@google.com>
- Cc: public-immersive-web@w3.org, public-immersive-web-wg@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CAKdCpxzV22py1COz8evcJjVbZ=rN_LbNdfgwzi2srWG8UczCfQ@mail.gmail.com>
/me thinks that's a great overview. Thanks Chris. On Fri, Sep 28, 2018 at 12:44 PM, Chris Wilson <cwilso@google.com> wrote: > Hi all! > > For our meeting at TPAC, we'd like to try a tool used with good success by > a number of other WGs - using IRC for queue management and minuting. I've > put together a one-page for what you need to know below (also in our > administrivia repo on Github: https://github.com/ > immersive-web/administrivia/blob/master/IRC.md.) > > -Chris and Ada > > -------- > > For the TPAC meeting, we’re going to use IRC to performing minuting and > speaker queue management. Since we’ll be doing queue management in IRC, it > is very important that you stay logged in to IRC during the meeting so > you can ask for a turn to speak. There’s a whole guide to using IRC at > the W3C <https://www.w3.org/wiki/IRC>, and further details on the Zakim > <https://www.w3.org/2001/12/zakim-irc-bot> IRC bot, but this mail lays > out the key bits. > > Please note that we don’t want this to be overwhelming, and it doesn’t > mean that you cannot speak without holding the virtual baton - however, we > want to ensure that everyone gets an equal chance to make their points, so > expect the chairs to discourage long speeches out of turn. > > We’ll be using the irc.w3.org server, in the channel #immersive-web. If > you have your own IRC client (I’m a big fan of IRCCloud, personally) point > it at irc.w3.org:6667. If you want to use the W3C’s basic IRC web > client, head over to http://irc.w3.org/, enter a nickname for yourself > (please use something identifiable as you!) and the channel name > #immersive-web. > > Quick Guide to Queue management in IRC: > > > - > > When you want to get a chance to speak, type “q+” in the IRC channel, > and hit enter. > - > > If you want to get fancy - or like me, you’re worried you will forget > what you had to say before it’s your turn - you can say something like “q+ > to say I want to suggest an approach based on quantum mechanics”. > Note that others in the channel *will* see this comment when you queue up > (i.e. before it’s your turn). > - > > You can ask who is on the queue by typing “q?” > - > > If you decide you no longer need to be on the queue, you can simply > type “q-”. (For example, if people saw your statement above and it’s > already been incorporated in the conversation and you had nothing more to > say.) > - > > You’ll see the chairs using “ack x” when someone is at the head of the > queue - that means it’s your turn to speak (we’ll acknowledge you in person > too). > > > Minuting using IRC > > We will be using the W3C’s IRC-bot-based RRSAgent > <https://www.w3.org/2002/03/RRSAgent> system to take minutes, too. The > short version of how this works is that you join a meeting, you should type > “present+” to let the system know you’re in attendance. > > If you are the scribe, you should type “scribe: <your name>” or > “scribenick: <your IRC handle>”. From then on, just take notes like you > normally would - preface people’s comments with their initials or IRC nick > or the like. > > If you want to change the log - for example, you believe the scribe did > not capture your point adequately, or there’s an error - you can tell the > bot to change things when the minutes are generated by typing “s/<old > text>/<new text>”. > > Finally, sometimes it’s useful to make comments that you don’t want in > the minutes, or that may even be a side-channel conversation that you > don’t want recorded in the minutes. You can do this using IRC “action” > statements, which are typically entered in most IRC agents by typing “/me “ > first - for example, when we’re in the middle of a conversation but I’m > getting hungry, I might type into IRC “/me thinks it’s time we broke for > lunch”, and the IRC channel will see “cwilso thinks it’s time we broke > for lunch” as an out-of-band comment - and then the RRSAgent bot will omit > that entirely when generating the minutes. In general, your snarky side > comments should be in /me statements. :) > > (There’s a Quick Start guide > <https://dev.w3.org/cvsweb/~checkout~/2002/scribe/scribedoc.htm?content-type=text/html#Quick_Start_Guide> > for RRSAgent for scribes.) > > -- *John Foliot* | Principal Accessibility Strategist Deque Systems - Accessibility for Good deque.com
Received on Friday, 28 September 2018 18:28:25 UTC