2025-06-20 Foundation Report

Welcome to the mid-June Foundation Report! I’m in an airport! My back hurts! This one might be short! haha

 

## AWS OSS

Before the UN Open Source Week, Andrea Veri and I had a chance to meet Mila Zhou, Tom (Spot) Callaway, and Hannah Aubry from AWS OSS. We thanked them for their huge contribution to GNOME’s infrastructure but, more importantly, discussed other ways we can partner with them to make GNOME more sustainable and secure.

I’ll be perfectly honest: I didn’t know what to expect from a meeting with AWS. And, as it turns out, it was such a lovely conversation that we chatted nonstop for nearly 5 hours and then continued the conversation over supper. At a… vegan chinese food place, of all things? (Very considerate of them to find some vegetarian food for me!) Lovely folks and I can’t wait for our next conversation.

 

## United Nations Open Source Week

The big news for me this week is that I attended the United Nations Open Source Week in Manhattan. The Foundation isn’t in a great financial position, so I crashed with friends-of-friends (now also friends!) on an air mattress in Queens. Free (as in ginger beer) is a very reasonable price but my spine will also appreciate sleeping in my own bed tonight. 😉

I met too many people to mention, but I was pleasantly surprised by the variety of organizations and different folks in attendance. Indie hackers, humanitarian workers, education specialists, Digital Public Infrastructure Aficionados, policy wonks, OSPO leaders, and a bit of Big Tech. I came to New York to beg for money (and I did do a bit of that) but it was the conversations about the f/oss community that I really enjoyed.

We did do a “five Executive Directors” photo, because 4 previous GNOME Foundation EDs happened to be there. One of them was Richard! I got to hang out with him in person and he gave me a hug. So did Karen. It was nice. The history matters (recent history and ancient history) … and GNOME has a lot of history.

Special shout-out to Sumana Harihareswara (it’s hard for me to spell that without an “sh”) who organized an extremely cool, low-key gathering in an outdoor public space near the UN. She couldn’t make the conf herself but she managed to create the best hallway track I attended. (By dragging a very heavy bag of snacks and drinks all the way from Queens.) More of that, please. The unconf part, not the dragging snacks across the city part.

All in all, a really exciting and exhausting week.

 

## Donation Page

As I mentioned above, the GNOME Foundation’s financial situation could use help. We’ll be starting a donation drive soon to encourage GNOME users to donate, using the new donation page:

https://donate.gnome.org

This blog post is as good a time as any to say this isn’t just a cash grab. The flip side of finding money for the Foundation is finding ways to grow the project with it. I’m of the opinion that this needs to include more than running infrastructure and conferences. Those things are extremely important — nothing in recent memory has reminded me of the value of in-person interactions like meeting a bunch of new friends here in New York — the real key to the GNOME project is the project itself. And the core of the project is development.

As usual: No Promises. But if you want to hear a version of what I was saying all week, you can bug Adrian Vovk for his opinion about my opinions. 😉

The donation page would not have been possible without the help of Bart Piotrowski, Sam Hewitt, Jakub Steiner, Shivam Singhal, and Yogiraj Hendre. Thanks everyone for putting in the hard work to get this over the line, to test it with your own credit cards, and to fix bugs as they cropped up.

We will keep iterating on this as we learn more about what corporate sponsors want in exchange for their sponsorship and as we figure out how best to support Causes (campaigns), such as development.

 

## Elections

Voting has closed! Thank you to all the candidates who ran this year. I know that running for election on the Board is intimidating but I’m glad folks overcame that fear and made the effort to run campaigns. It was very important to have you all in the race and I look forward to working with my new bosses once they take their seats. That’s when you get to learn about governance and demonstrate that you’re willing to put in the work. You might be my bosses… but I’m going to push you. 😉

Until next week!

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