> > - teach the best practices of web development applied to networking (a > rare skill) to a young audience >
> comments: > finding developers who are skilled at python, django, javascript, openwrt > and networking tools it's very rare. > We must aim at alleviating this problem by distributing as much knowledge > as we can. > We have to try to dedicate some tasks to OpenWRT and networking tools > (freeradius, coova-chilli and anything useful). > As a young contributor myself aiming to learn Web Development, Networking & DevOps, i feel a page on the website containing blogs from working professionals, guide of what all tools are a must-know and recommended way for getting used to them / learning them & any other advice from professionals working in the industry would be very helpful. we should aim at encouraging students to keep participating also when the > program ends, because while helping us to improve, they also learn a lot > and grow their soft and hard skills. > Agreed, a way to implement it could be a blog page on the website with a section "What i learned while contributing to OpenWISP" should inspire newcomers. > > - *community*: open source is not only about producing code, being > active in the community (mailing list and chat), helping out fellow > students and helping out new users who ask beginner questions is also very > important to maintain a healthy community > > +1, Is adding a task "Help a comrade" a good idea? It'll be very subjective if we score on this criteria but surely it will encourage students help each other! Cordially, Ajay Tripathi (atb00ker) -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OpenWISP" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
