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2019 Q3 - MidQuarter OKR Scoring #1010
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Documentation & Developer UX update Only real area of uncertainty is on the hiring front; while we've done quite a bit of work in sourcing and interviewing for our new documentation and technical content strategist, it's impossible to tell whether we'll be able to find, recruit and onboard the right candidate by the end of the quarter. We're continuing with our best efforts, and will be receiving some help from Danielle and company, so the outlook continues to trend positive. Note: I'm also adding @terichadbourne as an assignee on this issue, since some of her ProtoSchool OKRs roll up into the docs team's OKRs. (Teri, please update the primary OKR spreadsheet when you get a chance, and comment on this issue -- thanks!) |
ProtoSchool Update @fsdiogo and I have made great progress on a number of our highest-priority ProtoSchool items for the quarter, including:
Our highest-priority untackled items that we still hope to complete this quarter relate to new content development:
Given the anticipated halving of our capacity starting at the end of next week (😥), we expect to be unable to complete our ProtoSchool OKRs this quarter. As we reprioritize and shift responsibilities, the following higher-priority items are likely to be fully dropped or only partially completed (as will some lower-priority ones):
As @jessicaschilling mentioned, there's a single line on the docs tab of the IPFS OKR spreadsheet that represents the sum of all of our IPFS docs-related efforts for ProtoSchool as a single P1 line item. You can view our ProtoSchool Q3 OKRs for full priority and scoring details and an indication of which items we think of as relating to IPFS docs. I've used the same weighted formula that the spreadsheet uses to break down overall mid-quarter and projected scores for our ProtoSchool OKRs as a whole as well as by docs-related and non-docs-related filters, and you can see from these numbers that we've leaned heavily toward addressing the docs-related items and have been tackling our P0 items first. (Note that our projected scores assume either no capacity backfill this quarter or a re-allocation of time to onboarding new contributors.)
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Project OperationsThe IPFS Community is informed of relevant news in a timely manner We are proactively updating the community about important news and project progress, and shipping at least one post per month! For this goal, I'm counting posts that are not release posts or weekly updates. Check out: IPFS Camp Recap, Recapping IPFS in Q2, IPFS Camp Recordings, Q3 Task Force Remix, the GREAT CALAMITY CIRCUMVENTION ASSEMBLY and the Improved IPFS Release Process. We also have additional goals around a content plan and schedule, communications plans to have in-hand, and community comms metrics which are mostly not yet started, but appear possible to achieve by EOQ at this rate. Collaborations are systematized and prioritized This work breaks down into two main areas - collaborations process, and priority collaborations. For the process work, we've finished planning for a very simple pipeline to help manage our collaborations and opportunities, and a way to keep track of projects and products that use IPFS. The main components are a user registry, a collaborations policy, a collaborations pipeline tool, and the operations and communications to drive and support the overall effort. We're prototyping the registry and pipeline in Airtable, and work is on track. The collaborations we're supporting this quarter are Brave, Opera and ENS integrations and the relevant work there is mostly on-track. There are some unscored items due to summer vacations, so I'll wheel back around and update this once people are in the office again. Primary work to support these collaborations:
Lower priority projects are clearly owned and maintained The focus of this work is IPFS Desktop and Web UI. While we're not prioritizing new feature development this quarter for these, it's critical that they keep pace with new Go and JS IPFS releases. We've used this opportunity to revisit how Web UI is shipped in the core releases, to build a view into our overall dependencies and level of test coverage, and reorganized DRIs with Henrique taking charge of these projects' daily operations. Core Implementations The P0s are generally looking good, with Go already shipping a new release process and JS iterating on theirs. Some of the JS IPFS test maintenance and performance improvements will land this quarter, but not all. There are a number of P1s that are different aspects of project hygiene (lead maintainer docs, more API/CLI testing, project automation) that are all mostly on track. Research Yiannis delivered the IPFS/Libp2p workshop "A Brief History of Information-centric Networks" (video). The proposal for an IPFS workshop at ACM/ICN has been submitted. David is out on vacation, so no updates on a publication at this point in the quarter. |
Closing this issue since it's been superseded by #1033; feel free to re-open if necessary. |
It is the time of the quarter ⏱ where we check in on progress and chart our trajectory for the rest of the quarter (i.e. course correct to get back on track or intentionally drop KRs to focus remaining efforts).
@ipfs/wg-captains (+@raulk) - y'all have done this before, nevertheless here's the ask for each WG:
Mid-Q Actual
- How much progress you have made on this KRMid-Q Projection
- How much progress you believe you will have made by the end of the quarterNotes on grading
- An update on why you gave it this score (if not obvious)Checklist:
If anyone has questions, please post them here :) Happy mid quarter scoring!
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