2014-03-25 20:17 GMT-05:00 George Roberge <[email protected]>:

> On Tue, 2014-03-25 at 23:15 +0100, Sam Geeraerts wrote:
> > Op Mon, 24 Mar 2014 19:50:43 -0400
> > schreef George Roberge <[email protected]>:
> >
> > > I did spend some time on the site and Savannah, and created accounts
> > > on both.  I'll tell you that looking over the project was a little
> > > intimidating (since I'm not a coder), but I did see a few places
> > > where I could help out with some of the perhaps more tedious jobs.
> > > There are plenty of teams on the site, and it appears that there's
> > > plenty to do.
> >
> > The project's not meant to be intimidating, but I can understand if it
> > looks like our attention is mainly on code. Other areas need help too.
> >
> > > One thing first: I saw on Savannah that before jumping into asking
> > > permission to be added to a project, that the "applicant" should
> > > reach the project leader(s) through another means, like the project's
> > > mailing list.  So I imagine that this would be the place to talk to
> > > someone?
> >
> > Yes.
> >
> > > And this may be a dumb question, but given the need for
> > > coders, is there honestly a point for a non-coding person at this
> > > time?
> >
> > Your written English skills could help with cleaning up the wiki. There
> > are more than a few outdated pages on it [1]. Some should be
> > updated/rewritten, some should be deleted. The better the website is
> > written, the more attractive and useful it is to users.
> >
> > You also mentioned advocacy. I would like it if gNewSense would be
> > known not just among software freedom enthusiasts, but also with people
> > outside that community that might be interested. Hanging out with those
> > crowds and dropping names is a good start. I'm open to other
> > suggestions (for identifying target groups and ways to reach out to
> > them).
> >
> > > And this may be a dumb question, but given the need for coders, is
> > > there honestly a point for a non-coding person at this time?  I don't
> > > want to jump in and start doing things that aren't particularly
> > > useful to anyone at this point, and have anyone thinking, "Oh, yay,
> > > thank you for doing that thing...that really doesn't serve any
> > > purpose at this point...."
> >
> > You're welcome to contribute in any way you see fit, keeping in mind
> > that our focus is software freedom and that available man-hours in the
> > team are limited.
> >
> > > Silly question maybe, but I have zero experience joining something
> > > like this.  I'm a good independent learner, but I'm not familiar with
> > > "the system" here.
> >
> > Not much of a system, really. Showing initiative and asking for help
> > when you need it should get you a long way.
> >
> > [1] http://www.gnewsense.org/CategoryOutdated
>
> Excellent- sounds like a plan, then.  I'll get on the gNewSense site and
> find something to do.  Thank you!
>

You could also contribute to The gNewSense Blog <
http://thegnewsenseblog.wordpress.com/join-us/>. You could write about how
you use a particular application in gNewSense, about ideas to improve
gNewSense, post polls to know how other people use gNewSense, etc.


>
> By the way: the Northeast GNU/Linuxfest is next Saturday in Boston, MA
> (USA).  I don't know who will be there representing Linux; I know
> FreeBSD and Red Hat were there last year.  Perhaps there's an
> opportunity there, if gNewSense has pamphlets or anything like that.
>

I don't think there are any up-to-date pamphlets available. Designing them
is another way to contribute.


-- 
Luis Felipe López Acevedo
http://sirgazil.bitbucket.org/
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