Just a general note, the page to GNOME Love is at:

http://wiki.gnome.org/Newcomers

In general, you don't really have to announce that you're working on it.
Until you've uploaded a patch, the bug is fair game to everyone.  Once you
have uploaded the patch, then I suppose the bug is yours since you've
committed to solving it with code.

sri

On Wed, Jan 6, 2016 at 12:50 AM ZhaoQiang <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear Hashem:
>
> I am also a newbie to gnome contribution, and  wondering in these problems.
> When I have selected my gnome-love bugs,  Do I need to make an announce
> to take this work?
> Another thing,
> Do I need to tell my thought to mentor about the way  to solve this bug
> and ask him review?
>
> Kind regards.
>
>
> Yours,
> Sincerely
> Zhao Qiang
>
> Hi Harish,
> Welcome to GNOME! I'm happy to hear you're interested in getting
> involved. It looks like you already took at our
> https://wiki.gnome.org/GnomeLove/ pages. The next step is to find an
> easy bug that interests you. On GNOME's bugzilla bugs meant for
> newcomers have the "gnome-love" keyword, so you can search for potential
> things to work on there:
> https://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?quicksearch=gnome-love&list_id=84923
>
> Once you find something, you need to build the app from source and this
> guide is helpful for that:
> https://wiki.gnome.org/GnomeLove/BuildGnome
>
> Let me know if you have any other questions :)
>
> -Hashem
> _______________________________________________
> gnome-love mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-love
>
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