On recruiting contributors (through Openhatch)
Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2014 10:27 am
Introduction
This post is about if we should have a profile on Openhatch. It is a community aimed at matching contributors with FOSS projects. Their interest is to make open source more welcome to newcomers. They currently track 900 FOSS projects openhatch.org/projects/, which can be found through their volunteer data base openhatch.org/search/
What Openhatch does
Their main work is to organize one day Open source comes to campus-workshops, at various universities, where college students (on average 20-30 at each event) get to find a project they want to work on. They have a mentor who helps them read bug reports, get the source tree, submit code, and navigate the code base to find where to look for the bug/fix/feature.
The students are mostly into computer science but others can be into design, user experience and other fields. They try to emphasize that contributing to FOSS doesn't mean you have to code. (This blog post details how one grows and learns by contributing to projects.)
While I was talking to them on #openhatch, they recommended me some links, like how to get contributors or how to contribute, which I post here just for completeness.
Perhaps worth mentioning is that Openhatch is not affiliated with any particular university.
What Openhatch can do for Pioneer
If pioneer is registered on openhatch, their automatic bug scraper will crawl our github, and expose our bugs and feature requests for their contributors to find during their workshops.
One thing they often help FOSS projects with is to advise them on how to lower the threshold to go from user to contributor. E.g. making it easier for players to start talking with the devs, since this is the first step to become a contributor (I think we're good here). Or to translate the home page to several languages to reach a wider audience (something we could improve). Those we just some ideas they gave me.
Being on openhatch would obviously also give us some more exposure, both long term, and short term through their newsletter informing of new projects added, and upcoming workshops, and through their tweets.
What we need to do to get there
What is required on our part is to fill out a form to register us on the site, and that is pretty much it, as I've understood it. No real "maintenance" on our part is needed from this point, but since the automated bug scraping isn't 100%, it doesn't hurt to occasionally check in on it.
So, I'd like to check here if it is OK if I attempt to sign us up for an account for pioneerspacesim there? (I'd naturally like to share login with the pioneer core team, once that is done).
This post is about if we should have a profile on Openhatch. It is a community aimed at matching contributors with FOSS projects. Their interest is to make open source more welcome to newcomers. They currently track 900 FOSS projects openhatch.org/projects/, which can be found through their volunteer data base openhatch.org/search/
What Openhatch does
Their main work is to organize one day Open source comes to campus-workshops, at various universities, where college students (on average 20-30 at each event) get to find a project they want to work on. They have a mentor who helps them read bug reports, get the source tree, submit code, and navigate the code base to find where to look for the bug/fix/feature.
The students are mostly into computer science but others can be into design, user experience and other fields. They try to emphasize that contributing to FOSS doesn't mean you have to code. (This blog post details how one grows and learns by contributing to projects.)
While I was talking to them on #openhatch, they recommended me some links, like how to get contributors or how to contribute, which I post here just for completeness.
Perhaps worth mentioning is that Openhatch is not affiliated with any particular university.
What Openhatch can do for Pioneer
If pioneer is registered on openhatch, their automatic bug scraper will crawl our github, and expose our bugs and feature requests for their contributors to find during their workshops.
One thing they often help FOSS projects with is to advise them on how to lower the threshold to go from user to contributor. E.g. making it easier for players to start talking with the devs, since this is the first step to become a contributor (I think we're good here). Or to translate the home page to several languages to reach a wider audience (something we could improve). Those we just some ideas they gave me.
Being on openhatch would obviously also give us some more exposure, both long term, and short term through their newsletter informing of new projects added, and upcoming workshops, and through their tweets.
What we need to do to get there
What is required on our part is to fill out a form to register us on the site, and that is pretty much it, as I've understood it. No real "maintenance" on our part is needed from this point, but since the automated bug scraping isn't 100%, it doesn't hurt to occasionally check in on it.
So, I'd like to check here if it is OK if I attempt to sign us up for an account for pioneerspacesim there? (I'd naturally like to share login with the pioneer core team, once that is done).