I have the opening keynote at GNOME.Asia. I've changed my slides a dozen
times but I think I've decided on the following narrative. (Not to be read
outloud - this is just an outline.) The slides, which will be coming soon,
will be primarily the one concept per slide, mostly pictures with a word.

Feedback welcome!

Best,

Stormy

*Community built software is bringing change to the world*People talk a lot
about open source software and they focus on the licenses. It's often
thought that the license makes open source software, well, open source.
However, the license just enables it. It's the community that makes open
source software.

Who is the community? Is it a bunch of guys in their basement? Not really.
Communities are made up of a number of people that contribute at all
different levels.

At the core we have people that write the source code – the committers.
These are the people that actually wrote the project. However, however much
work they do, they don't do it all alone.

The next group is people that make contributions – they make code
suggestions to the committers or they may contribute in other ways like
marketing or answering questions on the mailing list or supporting the
systems or answering questions on the mailing lists.

One of the things that GNOME contributors do is man GNOME booths at
conferences. They get an event box – that was put together by a contributor,
man the booth for the conference and then send the event box back or on to
the next event. (picture of event box)

But committers and contributors are not all there is. There is also a large
user base. Users are very important. They spread the word of the project and
contribute ideas as well as bug fixes – in a sense they are all testers.

Now in all projects we have paid individuals and volunteers. Interestingly
enough open source communities view them all as individuals, even if they
are getting paid by a company. If an open source contributor that works for
a company leaves that company, they still maintain their contributor status
– the company loses it.

So how many people get paid to work on GNOME? - Aproximately 38%. The rest
are volunteers. (Pie chart.)

Who pays them? Companies of all shapes and sizes. (Logos)

Why do they pay them? For numerous reasons (Show the different types of
companies.) Some of them use GNOME internally – their employees depend on
it. Some of them ship products with GNOME in it, from desktops to mobile
devices. Some of them have built consulting companies around open source
software. (Might expand a bit here – Emily thought they'd be interested in
how they made money from GNOME.)

Why do the individuals work on open source software? This also varies widely
(use slides from Would you do it again?) Some do it to scratch an itch,
solve an interesting problem, learn something, be creative, learn new
skills, show you're clever, get fame, do the right thing/humanitarian.

What's interesting about communities, when you mix these individuals, some
that get paid, some that don't, all with different motivations, you get a
community with a very distinct culture and a set of values. And no two
communities are the same.

Some communities, that have given open source a bad rap, tolerate some
really nasty behavior on their mailing lists – lots of flaming. Other
communities, like Apache, are known for being very welcoming and not
tolerating that behavior.

GNOME has built up some really strong values. What values make up the GNOME
culture?

Accessiblity

Internationalized

Access to all

Easy to use/pretty

Working well with companies, 6 month releases, communication with companies

Having fun

That makes for a strong community

Many communities that have been around for a while and grown quite large
decide to build a structure. The Apache Foundation, Eclipse, etc. Let's look
at how the GNOME Foundation is structured.

All contributors can be members – we currently have 414. All members vote.
These are individuals voting, not companies. They can vote regardless of
what type of contribution they made and how much they've contributed. People
writing lots of code get to vote, people helping out with events get to
vote.

What do they vote for? Well, since running a large organization by voting
would be very time consuming, they vote for directors. The current board of
directors has 7 members and it will serve for 12 months. Elections happen
roughly around GUADEC every year. Throughout the year, the board makes all
of the day to day decisions.

Which brings us to our next point. What does the Foundation do? The
Foundation exists to further the goals of the GNOME project. They do this by
helping put out the 6 month releases, doing marketing, making day to day
decisions, running the budget, etc.

How does it make money and how does it spend the money? The GNOME Foundation
makes money by taking in donations. Donations from individuals through our
friends of GNOME program and donations from companies. Companies that donate
$10K/year become sponsors and most of them have seats on the advisory board.
The advisory board doesn't run the foundation but they offer advice and help
the foundation understand what companies believe is important about GNOME
and foster communication and collaboration between companies and the
community. This is especially important for projects like GNOME that don't
ship directly to end users – most users get GNOME through a distribution, a
3rd party. Getting the distribution's feedback about GNOME users is very
important to the future success of GNOME.

So last year we brought in over $200K and this year we plan to bring in over
$300K. How do we spend that money? We spend that money helping our
developers be successful. Just last week we had a user experience hackfest
in Boston – a bunch (how many?) of developers got together for a week to
discuss how the user experience is going and to decide how to improve it in
the future. We invited and sponsored Dave (?) who talked about his
experience deploying and using GNOME in the city of ?. Bringing users to the
developers so that we can further the goal of GNOME of bringing a easy to
use desktop to the world – build with volunteers and companies working
together.

So where do we go from here? GNOME has a great community, lots of
developers, contributors and users. It's deployed on xx million systems
world wide, it has great foundations, it's internationalized, accessible,
and easy to use and has a good format for working with companies with its
advisory board and six month release cycles. So where do we go from here? We
will continue to make our desktop easy to use and accessible to all (OLPC
picture or older person using computer) and we'll expand into new areas.
Netbooks are taking off – they are providing affordable computing to people.
GNOME Mobile – GNOME technologies are used in many of the worlds leading
mobile phone brands. Building on open source technologies enables them not
only to get to market faster but to offer cheaper and more open solutions –
I believe it is netbooks and cellular phones that will reach most of the
world before the traditional desktop. (Numbers from OsiM notes: millions of
mobile phone users world wide, most of which have never used a computer or
even had a land line.)

Thank you very much for joining us this weekend at GNOME.Asia. We all look
forward to sharing the exciting things that GNOME is working on. We hope
that you will join us whether it's as a user, as a bug submitter, as a
translator or as a coder. Please feel free to ask anyone questions and to
talk to anyone. Remember one of the values of the GNOME community is "FUN"
and "ACCESSIBLE" - I've found that they are very welcoming. You want to know
what the first thing I heard when I went to my very first GUADEC in 2001?
"You're a girl!!" Please talk to us, learn and join us in bringing free and
open source solutions to the world.
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