GNOME Foundation Update, 2026-03-06

This post is the latest in my series of GNOME Foundation updates. I’m writing these in my capacity as Foundation President, where I’m busy managing a lot of what’s happening at the organisation at the moment. Each of these posts is a report on what happened over a particular period, and this post covers the current week as well as the previous one (23rd February to 6th March).

Audit time

I’ve mentioned the GNOME Foundation’s audit on numerous occassions previously. This is being conducted as a matter of routine, but it is our first full formal audit, so we have been learning a lot about what’s involved.

This week has been the audit fieldwork itself, which has been quite intense and a lot of work for everyone involved. The audit team consists of 5 people, most of whom are accountants of different grades. Our own finance team has been meeting with them three times a day since Tuesday, answering questions, doing walkthroughs of our systems, and providing additional documents as requested.

A big part of the audit is cross-referencing and checking documentation, and we have been busy responding to requests for information throughout the week. On last count, we have provided 140 documents to the auditors this week alone, on 20 different themes, including statements, receipts, contracts, invoices, sponsorship agreements, finance reports, and so on.

We’re expecting the draft audit report in about three weeks. Initial signs are good!

GUADEC 2026

Planning activity for GUADEC 2026 has continued over the past two weeks. That includes organising catering, audio visual facilities, a photographer, and sponsorship work.

Registration for the event is now open. The Call for Papers is also open and will close on 13 March – just one week away! If you would like to present this year, please submit an abstract!

If you would like travel sponsorship for GUADEC, there are two deadlines to submit a request: 15th March (for those who need to book travel early, such as if they need a visa) and 24th May (for those with less time pressure).

LAS 2026

This year’s Linux App Summit is happening in Berlin, on the 16th and 17th May, and is shaping up to be a great event. As usual we are co-organizing the event with KDE, and the call for proposals has just opened. If you’d like to present, you have until 23rd March to submit a paper.

The Travel Committee will be accepting travel applications for LAS attendees this year, so if you’d like to attend and need travel assistance, please submit a request no later than 13th April.

Infrastructure

On the infrastracture side, GNOME’s single sign on service has been integrated with blogs.gnome.org, which is great for security, as well as meaning that you won’t need to remember an extra password for our WordPress instance. Many thanks to miniOrange for providing us with support for their OAuth plugin for WordPress, which has allowed this to happen!

That’s it for my update this week. In addition to the highlights that I’ve mentioned, there are quite a number of other activities happening at the Foundation right now, particularly around new programs, some of which we’re not quite ready to talk about, but hope to provide updates on soon.

GNOME Foundation Update, 2026-02-19

Welcome to another GNOME Foundation update post, covering highlights from the past two weeks (this week and last week). It’s been a busy time, particularly due to conference planning and our upcoming audit – read on to find out more!

Linux App Summit 2026

We were thrilled to be able to announce the location and dates of this year’s Linux App Summit this week. The conference will happen in Berlin on the 16th and 17th of May, at Betahaus Berlin. More information is available on the LAS website.

As usual, we are very pleased to be collaborating with KDE on this year’s LAS. Our partnership on LAS has been a real success that we hope to continue.

Travel sponsorship for LAS 2026 is available for Foundation members through the Travel Committee, so head over to the travel page if you would like to attend and need financial support.

February’s Board meeting

The Board of Directors it’s regular monthly meeting last week, on 9th February. Highlights from the meeting included:

  • We finally caught up on our minutes, approving the minutes from a total of nine meetings. This was a big relief, and hopefully we will be able to stay on top of the minutes now that we’re caught up.
  • The Board was thrilled to formally add Nirbheek Chauhan as a member of the Travel Committee. Many contributors will know Nirbheek as a longstanding GStreamer hacker, and he’s already been doing some great work to help with travel. Thanks Nirbheek!
  • The Board approved a new document retention and destruction policy, which is something that we are encouraged to have by regulators.
  • I gave an update on the operational highlights from the last month, including fundraising, conference planning, and audit preparation.
  • The Board considered a proposal for an exciting new program that we’re hoping to launch very soon. More details to follow soon.

The next Board meeting is scheduled for March 9th.

Audit submissions

As I’ve mentioned in previous updates, the GNOME Foundation is due to be audited very soon. This is a routine occurrence for non-profits like us, but this is our first formal audit, so there’s a good deal of learning and setup to be done.

Last week was the deadline to submit all the documentation for the audit, which meant that many of us were extremely busy finalising numbers, filling in spreadsheets, and tidying up other documentation ready to send it all to the auditors.

Our finance team *really* went the extra mile for us to get everything ready on time, so I’d like to give them a huge thank you for helping us out.

The audit inspection itself will happen in the first week of March, so preparations continue, as we assemble and organise our records, update our policies, and so on.

GUADEC 2026

Planning for this summer’s conference has continued over the past two weeks. In case you missed it, the location and dates have been announced, and accommodation bookings are open at a reduced rate. In the background we are gearing up to open the call for papers, and the sponsorship effort is on its way. Now is a good time to start thinking about any talk proposals that you’d like to submit.

Membership certificates

A cool community effort is currently underway to provide certificates for GNOME Foundation members. This is a great idea in my opinion, as it will allow contributors to get official recognition which can be used for job applications and so on. More volunteers to help out would definitely be welcome.

That’s it for this week. Thanks for reading, and feel free to ask questions in the comments.

GNOME Foundation Update, 2026-02-06

Welcome to another GNOME Foundation weekly update! FOSDEM happened last week, and we had a lot of activity around the conference in Brussels. We are also extremely busy getting ready for our upcoming audit, so there’s lots to talk about. Let’s get started.

FOSDEM

FOSDEM happened in Brussels, Belgium, last weekend, from 31st January to 1st February. There were lots of GNOME community members in attendance, and plenty of activities around the event, including talks and several hackfests. The Foundation was busy with our presence at the conference, plus our own fringe events.

Board hackfest

Seven of our nine directors met for an afternoon and a morning prior to FOSDEM proper. Face to face hackfests are something that the Board has done at various times previously, and have always been a very effective way to move forward on big ticket items. This event was no exception, and I was really happy that we were able to make it happen.

During the event we took the time to review the Foundation’s financials, and to make some detailed plans in a number of key areas. It’s exciting to see some of the initiatives that we’ve been talking about starting to take more shape, and I’m looking forward to sharing more details soon.

Advisory Board meeting

The afternoon of Friday 30th January was occupied with a GNOME Foundation Advisory Board meeting. This is a regular occurence on the day before FOSDEM, and is an important opportunity for the GNOME Foundation Board to meet with partner organizations and supporters.

Turn out for the meeting was excellent, with Canonical, Google, Red Hat, Endless and PostmarketOS all in attendance. I gave a presentation on the how the Foundation is currently performing, which seemed to be well-received. We then had presentations and discussion amongst Advisory Board members.

I thought that the discussion was useful, and we identified a number of areas of shared interest. One of these was around how partners (companies, projects) can get clear points of contact for technical decision making in GNOME and beyond. Another positive theme was a shared interest in accessibility work, which was great to see.

We’re hoping to facilitate further conversations on these topics in future, and will be holding our next Advisory Board meeting in the summer prior to GUADEC. If there are any organizations out there would like to join the Advisory Board, we would love to hear from you.

Conference stand

GNOME had a stand during both FOSDEM days, which was really busy. I worked the stand on the Saturday and had great conversations with people who came to say hi. We also sold a lot of t-shirts and hats!

I’d like to give a huge thank you to Maria Majadas who organized and ran our stand this year. It is incredibly exhausting work and we are so lucky to have Maria in our community. Please say thank you to her!

We also had plenty of other notable volunteers, including Julian Sparber, Ignacy KuchciƄski, Sri Ramkrishna. Richard Litteaur, our previous Interim Executive Director even took a shift on the stand.

Social

On the Saturday night there was a GNOME social event, hosted at a local restaurant. As always it was fantastic to get together with fellow contributors, and we had a good turnout with 40-50 people there.

Audit preparation

Moving on from FOSDEM, there has been plenty of other activity at the Foundation in recent weeks. The first of these is preparation for our upcoming audit. I have written a fair bit about this in these previous updates. The audit is a routine exercise, but this is also our first, so we are learning a lot.

The deadline for us to provide our documentation submission to the auditors is next Tuesday, so everyone on the finance side of the operation has been really busy getting all that ready. Huge thanks to everyone for their extra effort here.

GUADEC & LAS planning

Conference planning has been another theme in the past few weeks. For GUADEC, accommodation options have been announced, artwork has been produced, and local information is going up on the website.

Linux App Summit, which we co-organise with KDE, has been a bit delayed this year, but we have a venue now and are in the process of finalizing the budget. Announcements about the dates and location will hopefully be made quite soon.

Google verification

A relatively small task, but a good one to highlight: this week we facilitated (ie. paid for) the assessment process for GNOME’s integration with Google services. This is an annual process we have to go through in order to keep Evolution Data Server working with Google.

Infrastructure optimization

Finally, Bart, along with Andrea, has been doing some work to optimize the resource usage of GNOME infrastructure. If you are using GNOME services you might have noticed some subtle changes as a result of this, like Anubis popping up more frequently.

That’s it for this week. Thanks for reading; I’ll see you next week!

GNOME Foundation Update, 2026-01-23

It’s Friday so it’s time for another GNOME Foundation update. Much of this week has been a continuation of items from last week’s update, so I’m going to keep it fairly short and sweet.

With FOSDEM happening next week (31st January to 1st February), preparation for the conference was the main standout item this week. There’s a lot happening around the conference for GNOME, including:

  • Three hackfests (GNOME OS, GTK, Board)
  • The Advisory Board meeting
  • A GNOME stand with merchandise
  • A social event on the Saturday
  • Plenty of GNOME-related talks on the schedule

We’ve created a pad to keep track of everything. Feel free to edit it if anything is missing or incorrect.

Other activities this week included:

  • Last week I reported that our Digital Wellbeing development program has completed its work. Ignacy provided a great writeup this week, with screenshots and a screencast of the new parental controls features. I’d like to take this opportunity to thank Endless for funding this important work which will make GNOME more accessible to young people and their carers.
  • On the infrastructure side, Bart landed a donate.gnome.org rewrite, which will make the site more maintainable. The rewrite also makes it possible to use the site’s core functionality to run other fundraisers, such as for Flathub or GIMP.
  • GUADEC 2026 planning continues, with a focus on securing arrangements for the venue and accommodation, as well as starting the sponsorship drive.
  • Accounting and systems work also continues in the run up to the audit. We are currently working through another application round to unlock features in the new payments processing platform. There’s also some work happening to phase out some financial services that are no longer used, and we are also working on some end of calendar year tax reports.

That’s it for this update; I hope you found it interesting! Next week I will be busy at FOSDEM so there won’t be a regular weekly update, but hopefully the following week will contain a trip report from Brussels!

GNOME Foundation Update, 2026-01-16

Welcome to my regular weekly update on what’s been happening at the GNOME Foundation. As usual, this post just covers highlights, and there are plenty of smaller and in progress items that haven’t been included.

Board meeting

The Board of Directors had a regular meeting this week. Topics on the agenda included:

  • switching to a monthly rather than bi-monthly meeting schedule, which will give more time for preparation and follow-up
  • creating an Audit Committee, which is a requirement for the upcoming audit
  • performing a routine evaluation of how the organisation is being managed

According to our new schedule, the next meeting will be on 9th February.

New finance platform

As mentioned last week, we started using a new platform for payments processing at the beginning of the year. Overall the new system brings a lot of great features which will make our processes more reliable and integrated. However, as we adopt the tool we are having to deal with some ongoing setup tasks which mean that it is taking additional time in the short term.

GUADEC 2026 planning

Kristi has been extremely busy with GUADEC 2026 planning in recent weeks. She has been working closely with the local team to finalise arrangements for the venue and accommodation, as well as preparing the call for papers and sponsorship brochure.

If you or your organisation are interested in sponsoring this fantastic event, just reach out to me directly, or email guadec@gnome.org. We’d love to hear from you.

FOSDEM preparation

FOSDEM 2026 is happening over the weekend of 31st January and 1st February, and preparations for the event continue to be a focus. Maria has been organising the booth, and I have been arranging the details for the Advisory Board meeting which will happen on 30 January. Together we have also been hunting down a venue for a GNOME social event on the Saturday night.

Digital Wellbeing

This week the final two merge requests landed for the bedtime and screen time parental controls features. These features were implemented as part of our Digital Wellbeing program, and it’s great to see them come together in advance of the GNOME 50 release. More details can be found in gnome-shell!3980 and gnome-shell!3999.

Many thanks to Ignacy for seeing this work through to completion!

Flathub

Among other things, Bart recently wrapped up a chunk of work on Flathub’s build and publishing infrastructure, which he’s summarised in a blog post. It’s great to see all the improvements that have been made recently.

That’s it for this week. Thanks for reading, and have a great weekend!