With so many great #OpenSource event management apps like @OSEMpossum -- it's unfortunate #OSSummit isn't walking the talk and using #FLOSS tools to help manage the event.
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Replying to @downey @osempossum
Hey
@fossasia Looks like a perfect place for@eventyay to be used. I think you do everything that sched does! Can we as a community pursue this and help the@linuxfoundation in any future events?1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @sudheesh001 @downey and
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@eventyay lacks support and has a lot of bugs which need to be addressed. It just feels unstable and not finished yet. It was quite promising, but over 2 years later, I don't see much having being improved.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @elioqoshi @downey and
I am sure things have changed significantly. The folks working on it have made significant changes over the years. The bugs can be ironed out as a collaboration with a partner goes. Maybe worth a shot at a smaller event to begin with?
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Replying to @sudheesh001 @downey and
Tried it just a few months ago and not really. Sorry, but we can't complain about proprietary systems when we can't offer smooth open alternatives. We actively reported bugs but some of them never got fixed. Of course no one is obliged to listen to us, but it was surely not ready
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Replying to @elioqoshi @downey and
Thanks for the feedback
@elioqoshi ,@mariobehling@niranjan94 what could be done about this?1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
Absolutely, we need #OpenEvent solutions that work. @eventyay version 2 addresses many of the shortcomings of version 1 and will be a great step forward in upcoming months.
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