How To Find the Right Open Source Project To Get Involved With
An anonymous reader writes Writing on Opensource.com, Matt Micene shares his thoughts on getting started with an open source project. "I came back from OSCON this year with a new fire to contribute to an open source project. I've been involved in open source for years, but lately I've been more of an enthusiast-evangelist than a hands-on-contributor to an open source community. So, I started some thinking about what to do next. When I was involved in projects before, it was due to a clear progression from user to forum guru to contributor. It's a great path to take but what do you do if you just want to jump into something?" Matt goes on to lay out several steps to help new contributors get started.
Find a problem you want solved, then find the tool that appears to solve the problem. Find out why the tool doesn't solve the problem adequately and improve on it.
If no tool is available, start a new project.
I'd rather hear about how to get paid to work on open source. The article talks a little about convincing your current employer to donate some of your time to a project. But first, you need an employer.
Then, your job has to have some down time. I've never had a job in IT with any down time at all. There are always bugs to fix, features to implement, fires to put out, and management to report to. Management is always pushing for more, questioning numbers and estimates or just simply cutting time, to the point that a deathmarch becomes a certainty.
Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
beta.slashdice manager here. We're desperate for open source (ie, unpaid) programmers. No experience necessary! (or even desired). Make an immediate impact by editing directly on the production servers without testing or pointless code review meetings. Your choice of editors - vi, emacs, ed, pico, joe, or whatever happens to be installed on the server.
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