Making the Future Happen In Linux
Ohio LinuxFest is a popular, genuine community grass-roots Linux conference. It attracts corporate attendees such as Novell and Red Hat, but it is not a corporate event.
Most Linux distributions are maintained by small dev teams. Slackware, PCLinuxOS, Linux Mint, Clonezilla, Parted Magic, Puppy Linux, Sabayon, System Rescue, and hundreds more were all created and maintained by 1-5 numbers of developers and various other support people. Slackware is extra-special; it is the oldest surviving (and thriving) Linux distribution, it is still under the control of its creator Patrick Volkerding, and it is exceptionally stable and high-quality.
Linux Weekly News, which is the highest-quality Linux news site, was founded in 1997 by two people, Elizabeth Coolbaugh and Jonathan Corbet, and currently is run by a staff of four.
Linux Gazette has been going since 1995, and was founded by John Fisk. Linux Gazette is a testament to the power of a genuine community project-- SSC, which used to be the publisher of Linux Journal, attempted a hostile takeover of Linux Gazette in 2003. For a time there were two Linux Gazettes. The SSC version, linuxgazette.com, was a mess, went through several botched makeovers, censored unfavorable reader comments, and finally disappeared without a trace. Even the archives are gone. Meanwhile, the real Linuz Gazette is still chugging along at linuxgazette.net.
And the Point Is?
The point is that joining the 'wah, Linux isn't 100% ready for me yet, and dangit someone needs to do something about it' chorus isn't the best way to get there. Sure, if you wait long enough whatever problems are bothering you will probably be solved. But, unlike proprietary software, you don't have to wait. If you can't code contribute some help documentation-- tips and tricks, helping other users in forums, report bugs. If you can't do that donate a few dollars or some hardware. Maybe you're an artist-- donate a spiffy logo. Many FOSS projects have wish lists; sometimes it's as easy as buying a dev a book or some other trinket.And maybe you'll want to learn to be a programmer. There are abundant tools and howtos, and modern high-level languages (like Python, Perl, Ruby, Lua, and many others) are not hard to learn.
The main thing is to change your mindset. In the FOSS world, users are not helpless victims, but welcome contributors and participants. One person can make a significant difference, and the barrier to entry is low-- all you need is an idea and some time.
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Real nice article and info how people can contribute to Opensource community. Rather being helpless, get up and help Opensource thrive. Point well take.
If you are not a coder: write documentation, improve documentation. If you know other languages beyond English, join the translation efforts and help translate GUIs and documentation. FOSS in schools depend on having its interface in the local language. Visit the webpages of your favorite desktop environment to find out how - getting started is easy!