Valerie Bubb Fenwick of Sun Microsystems explains what open source is and her role as a developer on the Open Solaris project.
Category Archives: what I do
GHC09: Deirdré & Teresa Talk About Community on Ed & Ashley’s 5 Minute Show
Ed & Ashley also interviewed me and Teresa together about our work with the OpenSolaris community.
GHC09: Deirdré Talks Video on Ed & Ashley’s 5 Minute Show
Deirdré Straughan here – I’m not often in front of the camera, though I have been speaking in front of audiences and classes lately about what I do (and how you can do it, too). Here’s a 5-minute introduction. Thanks to Ed & Ashley for doing a great job on this!
Open Source Community Development Panel #ghc09
^ Valerie Fenwick, Sun, moderator. Panelists: Terri Oda, Linuxchix. Kathryn Vandiver, NetApp. Stormy
Peters, GNOME, Sandy Payette, Fedora Commons. Teresa Giacomini, Sun.
(These are just my rough notes.)
? to Sandy what activities and attitudes have helped your community flourish?
Teresa on diff tactics to grow communities in different parts of the world: In our June user group leaders’ meeting it became glaringly obvious that you have to take cultural differences into account, e.g. meeting styles and formats (formal vs. not, long vs short presos). The meeting built trust among the leaders, and has resulted in ongoing contact and idea sharing.
how to handle conflict within communities? if the community itself can’t resolve it, OpenSolaris has the OGB to resolve it. Val: we have had to step in a few times, but no serious action to be taken, just a moderation of issues – more getting people to talk
Stormy: GNOME version control change was controversial
? how do you convince management to invest in open source?
building community around an OS –
the hard part is getting people into a complex development environment
Stormy:
(Stormy Peters tweeting while ON the panel. #ghc09 Interesting.)
Building a community around an operating system is an amazing thing – people can just play with it at a conference. #ghc09
RT @storming: What’s hard about growing communities? Getting newcomers into a complex development environment. #ghc09
how can we get developers in Africa involved? forums are scary for them because of language barriers. Reaching developers in Africa: problems include lack of bandwidth, many languages. What can we do to help? #ghc09
I wonder if the TED translation project cd be applied to open source software translation needs (specifically, for hi tech videos like mine).
are women good participants in open source?
Terri: commercial 20% women, in open source 1-5% Why? more intimidated? (your code’s out there in public – could be embarrassing)
how to get people to participate? invite them! #ghc09
reaching women may require specific outreach e.g. women’s t-shirts
FSF had a mini summit for women recently
how to get people involved? invite them. find less-intimidating projects to get started with
Sandy – project lead makes a difference, breaking things down into smaller projects that SWAT teams can handle
Kathryn – advantages to having open source on your resume – we recruit those
Kathryn – as a commercial company we put our reputation on the line when we contribute to open source, so we make it good
Stormy: Why do you like working on oss projects? Passionate people! (Me and Teresa) #ghc09
sheer number of eyeballs who review code – Val can get six reviewers just by tweeting about new open source code
open source gives developers public recognition
experiences that open source communities are women hostile – competition, license to yell
Terri got a death threat “women in open source are a distraction”
but the community totally offsets that
Linuxchix has two rules: be polite, be helpful
women in open source – attitude can be a problem
Terri get involved in the women’s communities – very different environment
How to Survive as an Aussie Kernel Engineer
Brendan Gregg speaks at the Kernel Conference, Australia – Brisbane, July 2009.
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