I also think that DevOps topics (e.g., puppet, chef, virtual machines) have 
always been of interest to this community, and that the line between "sysadmin" 
and "systems librarian" and "software engineer" and "ARCHITECT" can be a little 
arbitrary. Many of us work in jobs only loosely tied to our official job 
description, let alone the thing we studied. I recognize my fellow code4libber 
in every person who is trying to hold the information systems of a library 
together in some way. ESPECIALLY the ones who don't get recognized because 
"that should only be x% of your job"[1]. 

I don't think we can really afford to be snobs about anything around here. If 
you are interested in "the depth and longevity of the problems that need to be 
addressed[2]" by library software, and have concluded that our community's 
approach to that problem solving effort appeals to you and you would like to 
contribute to it in some way, you are welcome here. 

Many code4libbers do not write code (yet). They deploy it, or they maintain it, 
or they customize it, or they tweak it. It's okay, that counts too. 

Bess

[1] Although I sure did talk on #code4lib irc more when I had a Friday 
afternoon reference shift!  
[2] How to Hack code4lib: 
http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/How_to_hack_code4lib

On Nov 28, 2012, at 7:46 PM, Jonathan Rochkind <[email protected]> wrote:

> A coder is someone who writes code, naturally. :)  "code" is something 
> intended to be interpreted or executed by a computer or a computer program. 
> 
> I think everyone agrees that anyone is welcome at code4lib. 
> 
> However, many want to keep code4lib conference presentations and community 
> focused on technical matters and matters of interest to coders. 
> 
> These things are not neccesarily contradictorily.  
> ________________________________________
> From: Code for Libraries [[email protected]] on behalf of Mark A. 
> Matienzo [[email protected]]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2012 10:02 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [CODE4LIB] What is a "coder"?
> 
> Some discussion (both on-list and otherwise) has referred to "coders,"
> and some discussion as such has raised the question whether
> "non-coders" are welcome at code4lib.
> 
> What's a coder? I'm not trying to be difficult - I want to make
> code4lib as inclusive as possible.
> 
> Mark A. Matienzo <[email protected]>
> Digital Archivist, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library
> Technical Architect, ArchivesSpace

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