Hi, Thomas. I'm not directing this to you only. I'm giving general advice to all readers here who are thinking of joining Debian.
On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 10:54:14PM +0100, Thomas Viehmann wrote: > - - Getting my GPG-Key signed, > - - Finding a sponsor, > - - Applying as new maintainer, and All of these are unrelated. You didn't find anything on the topic because order doesn't really matter. > - - Filing an ITP. This is something you should do if and when you're pretty sure that you don't want your work to be just exercise. There's nothing wrong with packaging something just for the experience, note; you don't have to be a package maintainer to be a developer. What Debian really needs is people who are more concerned with quality of the existing packages. One of those kinds of people is worth 100 new maintainers of single obscure "pet-packages." I'm not exagerating. If you (or any other potential Developer) want to make a name for your- self in Debian, then help the existing developers: - Find a package that is falling behind in its bug reports and ask the developer if he/she wants some help. Everyone falls behind eventually. Introduce yourself as someone who wants to help and ask her/him if a bug is fixed and offer a fix if the maintainer hasn't yet already worked on it. - Find a package that uses the "undocumented" pseudo-man-page and write a real page. - Help with the work on the next generation of boot-floppies. Right now, his is the MOST SIGNIFICANT way anyone can help Debian. This is what is holding up from us releasing Sarge _right_now_. When you go through the "New-Maintainer" process, point your application manager to your work you do for your technical requirements. Your AM will be relieved (s)he's not rubber-stamping yet another single-pet- package maintainer. Sure, all of these may not seem as "sexy" as uploading a package you create, but it sure helps Debian more. - chad