I guess everyone being in every channel makes sense for small teams (maybe up to about 20-30) - but I think after that point (or when there becomes distinct autonomous teams), I feel like on the whole you should just kind of leave people to get on with their stuff without feeling like they're being observed and scrutinized at all times.
In my experience, this kind of feeling leads to people not communicating freely in these channels, resorting to DMs - then management to decree "there are too many slack channels!" and compound the problem by forcing everyone into a denser crowd.
re #introduction radio free fedi is a small web, consent driven, artist populated, non-commercial, attribution promoting, community radio
~1 month into this experiment. 142 musicians, labels, writers, voices, patrons have contributed so far!
see pinned posts and site for guides how to contribute.
keep up the amazing support you have shown each other so far!
24/7 music and sounds from the fediverse
keep fedi weird
Hey! Do you have any advice on marketing physical products for retail sales?
We are producing records, roasting coffee, making toys, and selling cassette tapes, and I have no idea what the best way to market these physical items might be.
We sell through a couple of retail stores, and also online. Our physical store sales go well, and we have good stuff, and if we could move more of it, I could give more money to members of our community.
Ah, the joy of text localisation.
In this context, Microsoft, it is a zip file, not a postcode file, even though I'm in the UK :)
Any rubyists out there can help me compile forkawesome? I'm getting a whole bunch of errors on trying to install the bundle. Honestly I'm not really sure what a bundle is haha.
(I have literally zero experience with Ruby, mostly code C++ these days)
Following instructions here : https://github.com/ForkAwesome/Fork-Awesome