Although it is disappointing that the GTK+ Hackfest was canceled, the GNOME Foundation still plans to support many projects and other events. Considering the economic times, it probably is not surprising that some of our plans will be affected.
To help address this, the GNOME Foundation has been active recently in developing new sources of revenue. The "Friends of GNOME" website has been enhanced, and I encourage people to consider contributing to the projects that the GNOME Foundation supports. http://www.gnome.org/friends/ Also, we are working on making GNOME branded merchandise available. So, these sorts of efforts should help. There are probably other additional avenues that we could explore to augment our budget. Perhaps, for example, we could be more active in seeking grants. Or perhaps we could be more aggressive in finding more sponsors. Currently most of GNOME's sponsors are technical organizations which use GNOME software. Perhaps other types of organizations, like humanitarian ones, might be interested in some level of sponsorship if they were approached in the right way. Though, exploring new avenues of funding would probably make more sense to discuss on the marketing-list. Brian Philip Van Hoof says:
In Behdad's mail on gtk-devel-list, Behdad explains on why the foundation has decided to cut back on hackfests. This is a fair and reasonable reason, by the way (his last mail in the thread explains the financial aspect of it pretty well). http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2009-March/msg00165.html I think that during those hackfests people work on problems that companies, who donate sponsorship-money, are interested in. I fear that we have done a bad job at explaining them what the things were that we worked on. Maybe we didn't make the scope of those hackfests broad enough. I for example remember that in Berlin we had the idea of putting interviews with the hackers online. I never found those. This should be something the Foundation pushes for (given that they funded many hackers' flights I think it's fair that the Foundation gets at least some interviews with the hackers, to put online, in return). I think that if we'd include a few of the young projects into the hackfests, while explaining clearly to companies who are interested in these projects that our hackers work on these projects and that their sponsorship-money is used to for example pay for those hackfests, that we'll get at least some of those 90% sponsor offers back. That way they'll know that their sponsorship has a return of investment in code too (not just advertisement at conferences and on the website). Right now I can imagine that it's not always clear for sponsoring companies to estimate what they get in return. In economic hard times that means your sponsoring gets slashed from their budgets, indeed. Candidate projects that come to my mind include: GObject-introspection, Vala, Clutter, Tracker, GeoClue, Poky, DConf, WebKit, ... I'm sure I'm forgetting about a few hundred projects and I know gobject- introspection has been among the hackfest projects. To decide the projects we need a group that decides on how our "horizon towards the future" should look like. Which is also something we lack at GNOME in my humble opinion. (for many years) I don't think waiting for better economic times is even an option. Let's instead solve this.
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