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On Mon, 2014-04-21 at 23:57 +0200, Bjoern Michaelsen wrote:
On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 05:43:43PM -0400, Terrence Enger wrote:
From the QA meeting minutes:

(*) SUGGESTION: Standardization of our summary field for Bugzilla
    (*) Or: When searching for one phrase, display results from a
<     similar one (e.g. "image" -> "picture" or "graphic")

Hmm, Im uncertain as to what the goal is here and if its reachable.
- Reporters (end users) will most likely ignore an attempt at using a
  standardized vocabulary

Absolutely right.  In fact, we should not even mention it to a new
reporter until the need arises.

- Triagers will most likely have a good grip on all the words used for one
  topic and might even derive additional information from the nuances (as
  Terrence shows here ;) )

Triagers would be the first to apply standardized vocabulary.
Subject, of course, to us wanting not to discourage people who a just
not interested in vocabulary.  The goal is to be able to ignore
uninteresting bugs more efficiently.

- Ultimately: Who should be the consumer of these queries/standardisation? How
  does it help devs to address the impportant and urgent bugs quicker?

I see the primary user being a triager (or maybe a reporter) looking
for duplicates.

<sky color"blue">
  Developers do not matter, because we (QA) are going to do such a
  good job that no developer ever has to look at a bug she is not
  interested in and which is ready for her attention.
</sky>  

Hey, I admit that that is "blue sky".  How far can we expect to
advance toward that?  How much value is there in the
yet-to-be-demonstrated incomplete result?  I do not know, but the
sheer number of words I am writing suggests the improbability of a
good result.  Sigh.

Perhaps the detail page for a bug should have a button meaning "I am a
developer, and I have looked at this bug, and I am sorry that I spent
my time this way."  Well, a buttopn plus the opportunity to say what
enticed him to go there is the first place.


HTH,
Terry.



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