On 2/27/19 3:10 PM, Darren Wu via aur-general wrote:
As a complete newbie I might not have the rights to chime in here. As a member of the community, regardless of how long you've been around, you are absolutely entitled to post to threads on aur-general :) All we ask is everyone keeps things civil in nature ;)
But isn't it never too late if Mr. DeVault may add an apologetic comment to @noobpurple under https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/1227 now?
Sincerely yours, Darren Wu I honestly think Necroposting on that GitHub issue would not be a good idea.
In reading this thread so far it's clear to me that Drew just lost his temper, as we all sometimes do. By observing his efforts to explain, acknowledge (the first step towards correcting something undesirable in oneself), and take actions to adjust his behavior, I'd say I'm personally okay with his current demeanor. It goes without saying that there is an expectation amongst Dev's and TU's to be professional with user requests, bug reports, etc. I am of the opinion that if Drew decides to "turn" and revert back, then we as TU's address it then. However, until then, I think the behavior in the application should represent who he is now. Regards, Andrew
On Wed, Feb 27, 2019, 21:53 Drew DeVault via aur-general < aur-general@archlinux.org> wrote:
On 2019-02-26 11:37 PM, Brett Cornwall via aur-general wrote:
I would also chip in with the following from early 2017:
https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/1227
(I am also not in any sort of witch hunt, just thought this would be relevant.)
It should go without saying that I regret what I said here as well. I was going some stressful financial problems when those comments were written. Doesn't excuse anything, and I'm sure we could find examples of my jerkitude that I can't say the same for.
Instead I'd like to ask this: if I'm to be damned by my past behaviors, is there a path to redemption? Is there any criteria we could establish for demonstrating good behavior? Or, would I have to live with a forever vague sense of unease among the voters? Not to say that the unease isn't justified - it may in fact by the right answer to reject applications based on that unease. If any concerned can think of more tangible criteria, though, it would make it easier for me to dispell your concerns or give me some personal development goals to meet.