First let me say Hi to Ananya and Karnavee who just came in (I'm
guessing names, please correct me if I'm wrong, or if you just want to
go by a different name entirely).  Thank you for writing!  We really
appreciate your interest in Google Season of Docs and in Mailman.

Now, I've some more generic stuff to say, not just for Ananya and
Karnavee, so, if you're interested in GSoD, read on!

Season of Docs is a new program for us (as well as for Google), and
the developers are mostly at PyCon this week, so please forgive us for
being a bit distracted and "underinformed".  We will be sprinting on
Mailman next week, and I'll be giving a lot of attention to the
projects page (which is still very thin -- I'm surprised we got in, to
be honest!  But from now on, OK, we'll be very very good at it!)  I
expect other Mailman developers will jump in now and then too.  (BTW,
we're in Cleveland, which is UTC-0400.  Plan IRC time accordingly.)

In the meantime, feel free to propose something *now* (there's one
proposal up already), or feel free to take your time (there's plenty
of time on the timeline).  I don't know Google's budget, but my advice
is don't think of this as a competition.  I can't recall ever being
constrained by Google or lack of mentors -- we've been able to accept
all the projects we wanted to accept.

You should also ask questions on the Mailman-Developers list and on
the #mailman channel on IRC (note -- you need to have an authenticated
handle to join that channel).  It's generally not a good idea to go on
mailman-us...@mailman3.org *yet* (your request for ideas will be too
vague), and it's a *bad* idea to go on mailman-us...@python.org
(that's supposed to be about Python 2; discussion there about Python 3
is fundamentally off-topic).  Checking out the archives to see what
topics come up a lot (obvious candidates for better docs!) is a good
idea.  Obviously, prioritize mailman-us...@mailman3.org (and this time
the obvious answer is correct ;-).

Important point: mentoring starts *now*, not when you're accepted.
We'll help you improve your proposal.  We'll help you formulate posts
to the mailing lists when you're asking for feedback from the users.
We'll help you understand existing documentation, user interfaces, and
code as needed.  If you want to work "hands on", we'll help you get
set up.  If you'd rather play with systems that others maintain, we'll
provide test lists and sites for you.  (OK, I'm going a little far on
that last, I can promise access to *some* test list, and ordinary user
access to *some* site, but getting full admin access is going to
require resources I don't own.  Feel free to ask, and tell 'em I sent
you, though.)

In a phrase -- we'll get back to you shortly.

Steve

KARNAVEE KAMDAR writes:
 > Greetings to the Mailman Community!
 > 
 > I - Karnavee Kamdar - am a final year student pursuing my Bachelor of
 > Engineering in Computer Engineering from Gujarat Technological University,
 > Gujarat, India. I am writing this email to express my excitement and
 > interest in working on the Mailman documentation for Google Season of Docs
 > 2019.
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