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New Book Helps You Start Contributing To Open Source

jrepin writes "This new book Open Advice is the answer to: 'What would you have liked to know when you started contributing?' 42 prominent free and open source software contributors give insights into the many different talents it takes to make a successful software project; coding, of course, but also design, translation, marketing and other skills. They are here to give you a head start if you are new. And if you have been contributing for a while already, they are here to give you some insight into other areas and projects."

14 of 48 comments (clear)

  1. Looks nice by Securityemo · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's available as a PDF from their site. I downloaded it and skimmed through a few bits, it looks nicely written and seems to contain concrete advice.

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    Emotions! In your brain!
    1. Re:Looks nice by jeffb+(2.718) · · Score: 2

      Kudos to them for walking the walk and making this freely available. So, if we want to get a printed copy and support the effort, which purchase avenue sends the most money in the most useful direction?

    2. Re:Looks nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Apparently, it will be soon available at Amazon, but for now you can buy it here. The money would go to Lydia Pintscher, who has been actively involved in FOSS since 1990, and in recent years KDE. So pretty sure it will get poured into OSS development.

      IMHO though, it would probably just be better to directly send donations, bug reports and patches to your favourite open source projects. :)

    3. Re:Looks nice by jeffb+(2.718) · · Score: 4, Informative

      And reading my question would've been faster than typing your reply.

      At the risk of getting banned from Slashdot, I actually did follow the summary's link before I asked the question. I saw two alternatives, a "coming soon" link to Amazon and a link to Lulu. I saw nothing about which path would return more money to the project. So, my question: which way of buying is better (for the project)?

    4. Re:Looks nice by maxbash · · Score: 2

      Apparently, it will be soon available at Amazon, but for now you can buy it here. The money would go to Lydia Pintscher, who has been actively involved in FOSS since 1990, and in recent years KDE. So pretty sure it will get poured into OSS development.

      IMHO though, it would probably just be better to directly send donations, bug reports and patches to your favourite open source projects. :)

      I you expect me to believe that Lydia Pintcher has been involved in FOSS since she was 5 or 6 years old? http://www.lydiapintscher.de/about.php

  2. Maybe they could get money by bobstreo · · Score: 2, Funny

    If they sold it in the apple store.

  3. Re:EPUB? by kailoran · · Score: 5, Informative

    They publish the source .tex files at http://github.com/lydiapintscher/Open-Advice , so it's rather open.

  4. Pages 209-213 most important. by unity100 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It explains why most free software or community projects fail and how to avoid that.

  5. Re:Shut up and patch/fork it yourself by spauldo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That's true on some projects. There are a few megalomaniac assholes out there. Some are quite successful. Some are not.

    Sometimes the users are unreasonable. On smaller projects, you can't expect a two person dev team to drop everything they're working on to add whatever minor feature every user wants. In these cases, it's actually sound advice; if you want it, send us a patch, and we'll give it a try. They're not being assholes in these cases; they just don't have the time. In other cases, you have people who disagree with fundamental parts of a project. They demand sweeping changes that would affect the entire codebase. It's just not possible to make everyone happy.

    If you think about it, it's not really that much different than the closed source world; software companies don't bow to the whim of every user that submits an idea. Maybe, if enough people want a feature, they'll add it - but there's no guarantee. With open source, if enough people want a feature, one of those people will probably have the ability and time to code it and submit a patch.

    None of those are the reason there are 300+ Linux distros out there. There are a few distros that were forked due to poor management, but most of the time it's down to philosophical differences. Debian exists to fulfill the idea of a completely free platform. Redhat exists to make money. Slackware exists because it's been there since the dawn of time and some people like they way it does things. Ubuntu exists to provide a polished, user-friendly version of Debian. DSL exists for small installs. Many distros exist because some people decided they wanted to try making their own distro. When you get down to it, there's only really a handful of relevant distros out there - the other ones are really only for hobbyists, people with special needs, or people who want to try something different. If one of the small ones comes up with a good idea, it might get adopted by one of the big distros. It's useful, and I don't understand why people think multiple distros is a bad thing.

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    Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach either, do tech support.
  6. Re:we have it in pdf, but not in epub by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is. called latex. run tex2epub and have it in your favorite format.

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    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  7. This is relevant to my interests. by gman003 · · Score: 2

    I've been working on a game project for over a year now. I'd open-sourced it quite some time ago, but I'm currently in the process of moving it from "my project that has GPL'd source" to "an open-source project". I've put it up on Sourceforge, although I'm not yet using SVN/Git or have the downloads there. I've kept community involvement to a minimum and kept the project pretty low-publicity, since it's not quite ready for wide release. The next release, 0.1.0, is supposed to change that, but I've had some rather extreme delays due to personal and personnel problems.

    I'm about a quarter through this book now, and while much of it so far has been stuff I already know, even just putting it all together is enlightening. And if the later chapters are more in-depth, it might be a lifesaver.

  8. Re:Shut up and patch/fork it yourself by spauldo · · Score: 2

    Let's all say it together, once again, for those who somehow missed it:

    Linux is not a business!

    Again!

    Linux is not a business!!

    I can't hear you!

    LINUX IS NOT A BUSINESS!!!

    Ahem. Linux's survival does not depend on marketshare. It doesn't follow capitalistic ideals. It will survive, and continue to survive, because people want to keep working on it. Red Hat might go bankrupt, Canonical may close its doors, Linus might decide to switch to Amiga - but Linux will go on.

    If that's not "good enough" for you, then don't use it. Linux will go on without you, too.

    --
    Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach either, do tech support.
  9. Re:we have it in pdf, but not in epub by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    Here is a super secret link to it from the hyper secret search tool called google, it took 3 seconds to get it.

    https://github.com/kmuto/latex2epub

    there is a world outside of apt-get

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  10. Re:EPUB? by VortexCortex · · Score: 2

    What about making it available for those of us without personal hygiene issues?

    Ah, that's a non issue. Simply put the Venn Diagram for those given sets look something like this:
    (_) (_)