Quoting Angela Fuß (angela.f...@das-netzwerkteam.de): > What sort of non-technical contributions would that be if I would want to be > Debian Developer? What is possible and what is needed? > Are these contributions not already there and seen and appreciated? > Does Debian need more non-technical contribution or more appreciation of this > sort of contribution? Or both? > I have not got the skills to contribute technically but I am interested in > the well-being of the Debian community as a user and a person who enrols > others to use Debian, especially Debian Edu.
Hello Angela, We have many areas where so-called "non technical" contributions are welcomed. To name a few: - Debian website maintenance (see debian-...@lists.debian.org): there are technical aspects here, but also a lot of work monitoring requests, suggestions, working on some pages, site maintenance, coordinating translation work - Debian "publicity" team: the team working on any kind of publications made by the project, such as Debian News, official announcements. Needs help on coordinating work, backuping those who are doing the work currently (many areas in Debian constantly require "new blood" because people's involvment in tasks vary over time) - Debian events organization : the annual DebConf is an example and the most visible one, but several other side events happen and require a lot of involvment from many people to make them happen, talk about them, report about them, etc. - Translation work : it's often the one cited first (which is why I took care to not do it again). Participating to a translation team in your language and help on translation, review, maintenance of the many parts in the project where localization is involved (wesite again, packages, Debian News and announcements, etc.) Even those of us with English as native language can help, through the debian-l10n-english mailing list where most "review" work of many kind of texts is done - Debian QA work : it's kinda "technical" but here again, there are many tasks where a motivated helper with "just enough" background on some technical aspects of the project can help a lot And I certainly forget many others..:-) You mention "Are these contributions not already there and seen and appreciated?". Probably yes, but there is always more work to do than people to do it. Also, as I mention above, things are always changing in Debian world. People's commitment and involvment varies over time and the facts show that we always need new people to show up and gradually take over what is done by long-term contributors (many have their centers of itnerest changing over time). I personnally never made a mystery of my opinion that were slowing down at having more new contributors, during last years. Some people disagree with that analysis and find it a bit pessimistic but, anyway, we all agree that a motivated new contributor will always find her place in the Debian ecosystem. What you should NOT expect is finding someone helping you to find this or telling you "eh, you could work on ${THIS}". In short, you should go towards the work you want to do and not wait for it to find you...:-). But I guess you understood that already. And Debian Women is a good place to talk about this as we have, around, several people involved in the abovementioned "non technical" tasks, who are lurking on this mailing list. I hope this somehow long and quite bubullish mail answers some of your questions!
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