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This point is a good one to bring up, @spier. I've thought about this in the past and areas where InnerSource overlaps with other areas that have established literature and patterns. Here is a diagram: You bring up a 5th area, which is good engineering practices. The overlapping diagram is going to get complicated! I think that when producing some new content for InnerSource it behooves us to stop and think about any likely overlap with other areas that may already have established, great content. After reviewing, then decide to link to it, copy it, translate it, reference it, or keep it as background and write something completely new. Maybe there could be a decision tree process for deciding what to do based on what you find. |
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When discussing ideas for potential new InnerSource Patterns1, we sometimes wonder which material to write ourselves, what external 3rd party material to link to, and what to skip (i.e. patterns we don't want to write at all).
Now how do we make this judgement call? I am not aware of any documentation around this. Therefore I am starting this conversation to collect input about it. If the conversations leads to conclusive answers that are easy enough to follow, we may convert this into written documentation elsewhere.
Btw I assume that this problem is generally applicable throughout the InnerSource Commons, and not strictly limited to our Patterns.
This is certainly a discussion on a meta level, so probably at risk of leading nowhere in any reasonable amount of time :) However I hope that exploring it a bit can help us to understand better how other people in the Commons are thinking about this space.
Conversation starter
We define InnerSource as:
So when producing material for the InnerSource Commons (e.g. a Pattern), I see two approaches on the extremes:
As in so many cases, the extremes are often not that helpful :)
Some assumptions that I make about the audience consuming the material produced by the Commons:
Now what do we do with this? What should be our mindset when producing material in the Commons?
Questions that we could ask ourselves, when trying to explain a given InnerSource concept:
As you can tell, these are unfinished thoughts. Looking forward to the conversation.
Footnotes
See this example of such a conversation. ↩
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