## Flathub / Flatpak
I’ve been chatting with various folks about Flathub and Flatpak for a while now, but this week was my first chance to catch up with Sebastian Wick. It was really helpful to hear the history of Flatpak tech, understand where we sit today, and discuss how we might grow Flatpak in the near future, if we can find some funding for it.
Flathub continues to be the Linux App Store and I’ve never once experienced a Flathub failure, as a user… but I would love to see the Foundation support it more directly with acute financing. It’s such a valuable service and we need to ensure that it has the resources it requires.
## Digital Wellbeing Grant
Allan and I spent a big chunk of this week reviewing applications and interviewing candidates for the Digital Wellbeing role. We will have an announcement of the new contractor next week.
Thank you to everyone who applied! It was great to meet you all (a nice excuse to chat with some of our seemingly-infinite contributors), learn what projects you’re working on, and understand what you hope to see in the future of GNOME. There will always be more grants and the wider the base of applicants for each one, the more we can ensure we’re finding the best paid work for each contributor. So please never hesitate to apply for a role if you think your skills and experience are a good match.
## GIMP
I had a couple long and lovely conversations with Jehan, the lead of the GIMP project. The GNOME Foundation is a fiscal host for GIMP, and we’re quite happy to be. The two projects have a long and valuable history together.
We spoke about how we can improve some of our processes with respect to supporting GIMP and how GNOME and GIMP can share a little more love — in social media, in presentations (“Made with GIMP!”), and so on.
## KDE
Speaking of sharing love! I keep bumping into KDE folks here and there. They also want to spend a little more time online developing the KDE/GNOME friendship… and I’m all about it. Two great desktops, each with their own vision, providing beautiful freedom of choice to our users.
Watch this space.
## libxml2
I had a quick chat with Nick about libxml2
and the possibility of onboarding a new maintainer. If you are keen to pick up some work on serious, universally-consumed f/oss infrastructure, please do reach out.
## Framework
I got a chance to speak with Matt Hartley again (we missed our regular call when I was in New York). Maaaan, what an awesome dude. I asked him a bunch of annoying questions. He said maybe we could get some Framework laptops into the hands of GNOME devs. I told him to install GNOME OS. He had some pretty good fundraising ideas. Uh… some other stuff. Matt’s great.
## Python Foundation
I had a chance to speak to Deb Nicholson of the Python Foundation. If you ever bump into her or Loren Crary (ED and Deputy ED, respectively) please know that they have the backs of the entire f/oss community. They are both so rad, I have no words. They’ve already helped me with so many things and I’m massively grateful.
## New Treasurers
Our new Treasurer and Vice-Treasurer met our bookkeepers! It was a great meeting! I was totally useless because I’m not an accountant but I had fun listening in, in awe! haha 😉 I’m not sure if we’ll make a formal announcement for the Treasury roles, which is why I’m not naming anyone here yet.
Huge thanks to Rosanna for organizing this and getting everyone on-board. I’m really excited to see the new Finance Committee knock this out of the park.
## OSU-OSL
Oregon State University’s Open Source Lab recently had a scary financial moment, not unlike the moment the GNOME Foundation currently finds itself in. They also have a messaging challenge that’s not unlike GNOME’s: “How do you explain what the OSL is to someone who doesn’t already know?”
I had a lovely conversation with Lance from their team about how they can structure their communication such that they will find repeat revenue, year after year. They met their fundraising target for this year, but they provide services to a colossal number of free software projects and it’s essential that they don’t find themselves in the same financial position next year.
## Fundraising
It’s very important that I’m not the only one pounding the pavement and doing fundraising. You, GNOME, have a new Board on the way in. Legally, it’s part of their job (all nine of them) to help fundraise for the benefit of GNOME. I encourage you to encourage them: help them get on a podcast, a YouTube channel, in the news with your local OSPO, giving a talk at a local meetup, anything. We need more people out there in the world, talking about the maintenance and development of GNOME — and to let users know that we need their help.
We’re in this togeher. But thankfully we have a team of 10 people to get cracking, now that we have a beautiful new donation page. 🙂 Thanks again to Bart, Jakub, Sam and Allan for all your help over the past few weeks.
Until next week!
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