• Stormy’s Update: Week of February 8th

    Attended the FOSS Workshop. This was an event of mostly university researchers with some invited industry and project attendees (like myself.) The goal was/is to come up with proposals for NSF grants to study free and open source software. The discussions and writing took place over 2.5 days and evenings and I was impressed at the discussion that happened and the proposals that were starting to take shape. I pushed for less studying how projects work (I feel like we know that) and more studying how people (including students and companies) can get involved. There were also proposals for studying how the open source model can be applied to other industries (other than software), how different cultures get involved, business models, etc. I was also impressed at how long all the professors could focus on the project. I could have used some more email/voice mail/blog/twitter breaks. 🙂

    Met with a few more GNOME advisory board members. A few more meetings to go. It’s good to catch up with everyone and their plans so far. (No big secrets.)

    Exchanged email with FOSSFA about an event they are doing in Africa and about how GNOME could participate with some training.

    Talked to several people about GNOME a11y, usability and the hackfests in London and at CSUN.

    Provided quote for XIPWIRE press release. They are accepting donations for free and open software projects like GNOME free of charge.

    Welcomed Gary Ekker as Novell’s representative to the GNOME advisory board.

    This week for sure:

    • Presenting at IASA.
    • AtteSuperstickiesnding OSS Watch phone Advisory Board Meeting.
    • Working on GUADEC sponsorship.
    • At least 4 more meetings with advisory board meetings.
    • Board meeting.
    • Meeting with Rosanna.
    • Pinging a lot of people about a lot of things …

    This week hopefully:

    • Settle on dates for the Meet the Funders events.
    • Letter for annual report.
    • Catching up on email.
    • Landing pages for Friends of GNOME hits from Google ads.
  • Stormy’s Update for the Weeks of January 25th and February 1st

    Edited a GNOME Journal article. Check out the latest issue with its multimedia focus!

    Published the GNOME Q4 2009 Quarterly Report! Thanks to all the teams that wrote things up – we have some great write-ups about some awesome work.

    Submitted the GNOME Google Adwords account for approval. I was bummed when the automated response says it could take up to three months to get approval. However, it was approved within a few days! We’ve been running ads for Friends of GNOME and Women’s Outreach for the past week or so. I’ve played with the keywords and ads some and gotten some feedback from the marketing list as well. Anyone with experience with Google Adwords would be appreciated!

    Conversations with several board members about how things are going for the Board and how things are running with the GNOME Foundation.

    Many one on one conversations with GNOME Advisory Board members. These were mostly brief chats 20-30 minutes about how things were going for them and how we could best work together. Discussed things like hackfests and GUADEC as well.

    Friends of GNOME update for December 2009 and January 2010. We had a stellar 2009! In 2009, Friends of GNOME raised $29,578 for GNOME! That is the same amount raised by 3 large companies. From community contributions. It’s enough for several hackfests and close to the amount needed annually for a part time system administrator. In December we raised $2,663, more than any other December. Spread the word!

    Sent thank you’s to people who donated money to GNOME. Sent a few postcards out for the Adopt a Hacker program. Sent on addresses to others who also owe thank you postcards.

    GNOME Jobs. Heard about several GNOME jobs and asked people to post them on the GNOME Jobs board.

    Had 1:1 meeting with Rosanna. Still working with her to try to get her workload balanced.

    GNOME Board of Directors meeting.

    Pinged a lot of people about a lot of things. Including GUADEC sponsorships.

    Checked on getting a Euro account for the GNOME Foundation. Found one option that is good for large amounts but has excessive wire fees for small amounts.

    Attended the Women in Free Software IRC meeting.

    Attended a “Benchmarking Women Leadership” event put on by the White House Project. I was expecting more data about the new report but instead I met a lot of interesting people that may be able to help with contacts for the GNOME Outreach Program for Women.

    Started planning a “Meet the Funders” event with other free software projects. We’ll invite people from Foundations and other funders to learn more about free software projects.

    This week:

  • Mozilla Sponsors GNOME Accessibility Efforts

    BOSTON, Mass — February 4, 2010 — The GNOME Foundation is happy to announce a substantial donation from the Mozilla Corporation to benefit the GNOME Project’s accessibility efforts. The donation will help continue the collaborative efforts between GNOME and Mozilla on Accessibility.

    The Mozilla Corporation is granting the GNOME Foundation $10,000 for 2010. The funds will be used in part to send GNOME developers to the 25th Annual International CSUN Technology & Persons with Disabilities Conference. The CSUN Conference is one of the premier technology conferences for people with disabilities, and by holding a GNOME accessibility hackfest at the conference, GNOME can ensure a diverse group of GNOME developers are immersed in the accessibility space with direct hands-on interaction with end users.

    The recent donation from Mozilla continues a long partnership between GNOME and Mozilla for accessibility. The GNOME Foundation received a $10,000 grant in 2008 that was used for the GNOME Accessibility Outreach Program, and resulted in major accessibility improvements.

    “The direct impact of the Mozilla funding has allowed GNOME to add Accessible Rich Internet Applications (ARIA) support to the Orca screen reader and other accessibility enhancements in GNOME,” said Willie Walker, lead of the GNOME Accessibility Team. “All these helped make GNOME/Firefox a compelling free alternative to commercial products for the visually impaired. As a result, we’re seeing users around the world using GNOME as their every day solution.”

    The GNOME Project has worked hard to ensure that all users have the opportunity to enjoy a Free Software desktop. Just as GNOME has had great success making internationalization part of the core platform, accessibility is also taking its place as a core value of the platform. Sending GNOME developers to CSUN will help to ensure that developers working on all areas of GNOME are well-educated on accessibility issues and continue to build accessibility features and functions into GNOME rather than “bolted-on” features.

    The GNOME Foundation and Mozilla are committed to open source, open standards, and open formats. Both organizations and their contributors contribute to numerous projects to ensure an open Web and open desktop platform for all users. Part of that effort is working hard to ensure users with physical disabilities are able to make use of a free desktop and Web browser.

    “The GNOME Foundation’s commitment to accessibility improves the desktop and Internet experience for millions of people, and Mozilla is proud to support this work,” said Mitchell Baker, Chair of the Mozilla Foundation.

    About GNOME and the GNOME Foundation

    GNOME is a free-software project whose goal is to develop a complete, accessible and easy to use desktop for Linux and Unix-based operating systems. GNOME also includes a complete development environment to create new applications. It is released twice a year on a regular schedule.

    The GNOME desktop is used by millions of people around the world. GNOME is a standard part of all leading GNU/Linux and Unix distributions, and is popular with both large existing corporate deployments and millions of small business and home users worldwide.

    Composed of hundreds of volunteer developers and industry-leading companies, the GNOME Foundation is an organization committed to supporting the advancement of GNOME. The Foundation is a member directed, non-profit organization that provides financial, organizational and legal support to the GNOME project and helps determine its vision and roadmap.

    More information about GNOME and the GNOME Foundation can be found at www.gnome.org andfoundation.gnome.org.

    Media Enquiries

  • Stormy’s Update: Week of January 18th

    Finally wrapped up the very long thread on the Foundation list and most of the side conversations.

    Met with a couple of advisory board members (via phone, email and IRC) to discuss funding and GUADEC.

    We are partnering with Project::Possibility! Look for updates from the GNOME accessibility folks.

    Got all the GNOME Q4 report updates in the report and edited except for one … actively waiting on that one!

    Read all the Google Grants instructions, set up an Adwords account, set up campaigns, ad groups, ads and keywords. Was ready to submit and the checklist says we need at least two ads per adgroup, so going back to fill in today. (Also got a login on our Piwik account from Jaap Haitsma to see gnome.org web page traffic to help evaluate our adwords usage.)

    Sent out requests for sponsorship for the usability hackfest.

    Attended GNOME board meeting.

    Met with Jim Zemlin from the Linux Foundation. Briefly discussed Collaboration Summit, GNOME participation, mobile, Moblin and fundraising/memberships.

    Sent out thank you’s for Friends of GNOME.

    Worked with Grace Hopper (a women in computing conference) on FOSS (free and open source) plans for the conference. They were already working on it and they’ve added me to the group discussing the plans. It’s looking promising.

    Attended Snowy (Tomboy Online) IRC meeting.

    Talked to Gregoire Gentil from Always Innovating. Their Touch Book uses GNOME technologies. They’d love to see better touch screen support for GNOME. (Right now you have to use a stylus instead of fingers.) Set up tentative plans to meet in person at the Collaboration Summit.

    Helped with a couple of things (panel, lightening talks, schedule) for OSCON and for the Women in Open Source miniconference at SCALE.

    Luis de Bethencourt is going to represent GNOME at FOSS Nigeria. Thanks to Agustín Benito Bethencourt for recruiting him.

    Chuck Payne and Zonker will represent GNOME at the Texas Linux Fest.

    Worked on planning my travel for the year. I’d love to see more people officially representing GNOME at events.

  • Stormy’s Update: Week of January 11th

    Started out my week late as it turns out that Amtrak can randomly cancel trains – like for a whole weekend.

    We had a GNOME Advisory Board meeting about GNOME Foundation 2010 goals. We got a lot of good feedback. After adding another level of detail, I think we are ready to send them out. Look for them soon from the board. (My goals and the Foundation goals are very much aligned at this point, so I am looking forward to getting everyone’s feedback on them.)

    Attended a Women in Free Software IRC meeting about our day long event at the Libre Planet event in March.

    GNOME Q4 Report. Got some of the write-ups for the Q4 report – still need to ping some people.

    Worked with a couple of the advisory board members on how best to help them support us this year. Agreed on amounts and dates, divided some of the payments up, filled out some paperwork, …

    Sent out request for funding for things like GUADEC, the accessibility hackfest and the other machine that the sys admin team would like to have.

    Had a few conversations around GUADEC. If you’d like to help with GUADEC this year, please send an email to gmc@sonologic.nl.

    Looking for people to represent GNOME at the Texas Linux Fest, FOSS Nigeria, Grace Hopper, Educational Technology Day at Ithaca College. Let me know if you are interested!

    Pinged to find out why I/we are not being included in Open Source for America conversations. (Being an advisor is a lot of work if you’d like information.)

    Our Google Grants application was approved! Google Grants allows us to advertise through Google AdWords. It’s basically like a grant of advertising money. Now I have to figure out how we can best use Google Adwords.

    KDE sent a transfer over for the Desktop Summit so we could close the books. All looks good!

    Participated in the very long thread about free software, open source software, proprietary software, GNOME and companies on the Foundation list. Had a lot of side conversations about it too.

    Attended the GNOME marketing IRC meeting which was very well attended and generated lots of good ideas which people signed up to follow up on.

    Worked with James Vasile from SFLC and another organization on some agreements.

  • Stormy’s Update: Week of January 4th

    • Worked a bit on CiviCRM. Could really use some more volunteers. (A big thanks to Jeff Schroeder, Dave Greenberg and Donald Lobo.) Put in sponsoring companies, adboard members, (Dave Neary also added some contacts), put in tasks, added Rosanna and we can track things including sent invoices, added the board so we can all track todo items. (Although todo items may sound like a simple thing it’s really nice to be able to see who owns it, who’s involved and what artifacts are associated with it. So if I’m curious if we’ve invoiced a company for an event, I can open that company’s record, the event record or Rosanna’s and I can see a copy of the invoice attached if she’s invoiced them. So now we have a shared record of paperwork too.) Next big step is to import all data from Paypal and set it to track all of our donors.
    • Had a meeting with Project:possibility to talk about the option of them including GNOME projects in one of their weekend code contests for university students. It would require us to find the right size projects (for teams of 4-6 people for a weekend) and provide mentors. The goal is to introduce university students to free software projects for people with disabilities.
    • Zonker is now leading the GNOME press team! Zonker has a lot of experience working with the press (and being the press :). He’s also already been doing the role of press team lead – he coordinated and wrote the GUADEC 2010 press release and is working on another one as we speak. He’s interested in re-establishing our regional press contacts, getting more people involved and planning for GNOME 3.0!
    • Worked on goals and vision. The next advisory board meeting will also discuss GNOME Foundation 2010 goals and we should be starting a discussion on the Foundation list soon to discuss the Foundation’s goals and my own goals.
    • Sent some thank you’s for both donations and help.
    • Pinged people about things.
    • Answered a whole bunch of email and got myself back down to my normal Inbox. (And then went offline this weekend and I now have twice as many as I did last week …)
    • Accepted an invitation to attend the 2010 Workshop on the Future of Research on Free/Open Source Software (FOSS). Booked travel.
    • Scott Reeves joined the GNOME Advisory Board, replacing JP Rosevear. Scott and Zonker will now be representing Novell. Scott works on openSUSE desktop related areas such as the gnome-main-menu and PackageKit. We’re happy to have Scott on the board! (Although we’ll miss JP!)
    • Met with a GNOME Foundation partner to discuss how we could work more closely together.
    • Sent out call for Q4 Quarterly Report.
  • Stormy’s Update: Week of December 14th

    Pinged some people to help with GUADEC by mentoring or creating timelines.

    Had a great conversation with Sara Crouse from Wikimedia about how they find, apply and manage grants, like ones from the Hewlett Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Looking forward to implementing some of that at the GNOME Foundation.

    Spent an inordinate amount of time and energy on the threads that started on the Foundation list and the side conversations that came out of it. Assuming that even a fraction of the people involved spent that much time and energy, we need to figure out a more effective way to have those conversations. Obviously we could use some more self moderating earlier in the thread. Perhaps other forums, like the all hands IRC meeting we discussed in the past could also help.

    Took some time off to deal with a personal crisis. (And no, it wasn’t Christmas shopping – I haven’t done that yet!)

    Provided a quote for OpenDesktop.org and OpenSuSE build press release.

    Pushed a number of things and projects along from missing payments to projects with no activity to potential partnerships. Hopefully they’ll all be moving forward soon and I’ll be able to report on their success.

    Posted a couple of blog posts. I really hope GNOME is able to set an example for how free software projects can transition to the web services world. And I think we all need to keep not copyright law in mind, but the fact that we are representing GNOME in public in mind as we post to public forums. Quite a few press folks and journalists picked up on the Foundation list threads and we certainly didn’t look like we were following our own Code of Conduct.

    Had a really good weekend with the family.

  • Stormy’s Update: Week of December 7th

    Answered a lot of emails and had a lot of discussions. As for things I actually crossed off my todo list:

    • Updated CiviCRM requirements document with a few more process like the travel committee. Met with Dave Greenberg from CiviCRM. He gave me a lot of pointers on how to get started. I’ll be working on getting CiviCRM set up for the GNOME Foundation over the next couple of weeks.
    • Sent out email about the GNOME Foundation changing advisory board fees with the support of the advisory board.
    • Spoke to the Northern Colorado Linux User Group. Gave my “Would you do it again for free?” talk and had a very interesting and involved discussion. Someone from the first team I ever worked on at HP held up a “I heart ObAM” sign. ObAM is the user interface programming interface for HPUX tools. It sat on top of Motif when I first joined the team. (I actually had to read the sign twice to see that it said ObAM and not Obama which is a sign of how my world of acronyms and names has changed.)
    • Did all my expense reports for the last three trips. (I can’t believe people griped about the semi-automated HP/Amex system. I personally would love to have it now.)
    • Attended GNOME Board of Directors meeting.
    • Worked with Rosanna to invoice a couple of advisory board members, including one that is funding a new  program.
    • Had a meeting with Rosanna over IRC. Trying to help balance out her workload. (I’ve created a lot more work. Since I’ve joined we’ve had a lot more events, invoicing, new programs, more Friends of GNOME, etc.)
    • Had a great GNOME Advisory Board meeting about events and copyright assignments. The copyright assignment discussion in particular was very dynamic.
    • Published November Friends of GNOME data.

    Focus for this week:

    • My goals. Finishing a draft we can share so everyone can comment.
    • CiviCRM. Getting it set up. Starting first with Board of Advisors information and then Friends of GNOME.
  • Stormy’s Update: Week of November 30th

    LiMo Foundation. Met with Andrew Savory, Mal Minhas and Gyanee Dewnarain at the LiMo London offices. We talked about LiMo, GNOME Mobile, the work LiMo member companies are doing with GNOME technologies, our foundations and how we can work more closely together. Good conversations and I expect we’ll continue to work together and hopefully announce more later.

    Canonical design, user experience and usability team. Met with Charline Poirier, Ivanka Majic and Iain Farrell at their London offices. Talked about usability studies on GNOME technologies, a GNOME usability hackfest and studying how to disseminate usability study results into free and open source software community. I’ll be introducing more GNOME folks into the conversation and hopefully the conversations will make their way to the GNOME usability list and into some concrete plans to get more GNOME usability info into the hands of folks working on GNOME.

    Met with Lucas Rocha for lunch to discuss GNOME stuff and then had a quick peek at a Litl webbook! It’s a very elegantly designed device. While the software is of course great (it’s designed by great people using some terrific free and open source software technologies 🙂 what really struck me was the hardware. The keyboard is very “clean” and easy to use without lots of random extra keys and when you swing the screen all the way around to set it up like a picture frame, it feels very sturdy. It was fun to see.

    OSS Watch. Went out to Oxford to meet the OSS Watch team and participate in the OSS Watch advisory board meeting. (This was the reason for my trip to the UK.) OSS Watch is helping educational institutions in the UK use open source software. Or help them to the next step in their plans, like building community around the projects they’ve developed. Lots of interesting discussions. (And some great but brief sightseeing.)

    Invited GNOME event planners to GNOME Advisory Board meeting next Tuesday which will be about events and copyright assignments.

    One on one meeting with Brian Cameron to talk about status. Brian will be sharing my past year’s goals and achievements as the board of directors determined them. I’ll be sharing my next year’s goals as part of the process of figuring out what they should be.

    Did an interview about Women in Linux with Anton Borisov who is writing for Linux+DVD magazine

    The US event box is going to be maintained by Larry Cafiero. (Thanks to Zonker for nominating Larry.) We’ve been looking for a west coast home for the event box and so I’m excited Larry will be helping us out.

    Emailed press, journalist and blogger contacts about our GUADEC 2010 announcement on Monday.

    Spent approximately 40 hours travelling. Not counting all the trains in London.

  • GUADEC 2010 to be held in The Hague, Netherlands

    BOSTON, Mass — November 30, 2009 — GUADEC, the annual GNOME conference, will be held in The Hague, Netherlands from the 24th through the 30th of July 2010. The conference is expected to draw more than 500 attendees to discuss and direct the future of the GNOME Project. GUADEC will draw members of the GNOME development and user community, as well as many participants in the overall FLOSS community from local projects, organizations, and companies.

    The conference will lead up to the GNOME 3.0 release in September 2010. Keeping with the 3.0 theme, the three primary themes for GUADEC 2010 will be Government, education, and end users.

    The Hague was one of several locations proposed for GUADEC in 2010. It was chosen in part due to the excellent facilities at the bid site, as well as easily accessible site for those traveling to GUADEC. The conference will be held at the Haagse Hogeschool, the higher vocational education institute in the region with an existing affinity for open source.

    “Free Software is of great importance to culture in the digital age,” said Kees Vendrik, Green MP and advocate of open source and open standards in the Dutch public sector. “It offers a fertile feeding ground for education, innovation, and the economy at large. My party is delighted that the GNOME conference is coming to The Netherlands and we believe it will inspire our governmental bodies to put policy into practice.”

    The core team of the winning bid consists of Vincent van Adrighem, Koen Martens, Sanne te Meerman, Fabrice Mous, and Reinout van Schouwen. Each of the core team members are well-rooted in the FLOSS community at large, with network spanning the most active FLOSS organizations in The Netherlands.

    “We are very excited and honored to host GUADEC next year,” said Reinout van Schouwen. “With the upcoming release of GNOME 3.0, we’re confident that the conference will be one of the most important ones in the history of the GNOME project. We would like to invite the Free Software communities in our country and abroad to take advantage of this opportunity and show the world that open technology offers solutions for everyone!”

    GUADEC is now in its 11th year, and follows a successful joint conference, the Gran Canaria Desktop Summit (GCDS), in 2009 with the KDE Project. As planned, GUADEC 2010 will be hosted on its own, but the door is open to another co-hosted event in the future.

    Stormy Peters, Executive Director of the GNOME Foundation, said that GCDS was “a great conference, and an opportunity to work with our friends in the KDE Project on areas where both desktops can benefit. We hope to build on that experience this year with GUADEC.”

    See the GUADEC Website for more information about the conference. Registration details and information on the call for papers will be up by January 6th. Look for another announcement at that time with more details about the CFP and tracks for GUADEC 2010.

    About GNOME and the GNOME Foundation

    GNOME is a free-software project whose goal is to develop a complete, accessible and easy to use desktop for Linux and Unix-based operating systems. GNOME also includes a complete development environment to create new applications. It is released twice a year on a regular schedule.

    The GNOME desktop is used by millions of people around the world. GNOME is a standard part of all leading GNU/Linux and Unix distributions, and is popular with both large existing corporate deployments and millions of small business and home users worldwide.

    Composed of hundreds of volunteer developers and industry-leading companies, the GNOME Foundation is an organization committed to supporting the advancement of GNOME. The Foundation is a member directed, non-profit organization that provides financial, organizational and legal support to the GNOME project and helps determine its vision and roadmap.

    More information about GNOME and the GNOME Foundation can be found at www.gnome.org andfoundation.gnome.org.

    Media Enquiries

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