The GNOME Project

The GNOME Project
Founded August 1997 (1997-08)
Founder Miguel de Icaza and Federico Mena[1]
Type Community
Focus Free software
Products GNOME, GTK, glib,…
Method Development and documentation
Website gnome.org

The GNOME Project is a community behind the GNOME desktop environment and the software platform upon which it is based. It consists of all the software developers, artists, writers, translators, other contributors, and active users of GNOME. It is part of the GNU Project.[2]

GNOME Foundation

In August 2000, the GNOME Foundation was set up to deal with administrative tasks and press interest, and to act as a contact point for companies interested in developing GNOME software. While not directly involved in technical decisions, the Foundation does coordinate releases and decide which projects will be part of GNOME. Membership is open to anyone who has made a non-trivial contribution to the project.[3] Members of the Foundation elect a board of directors every November, and candidates for the positions must be members themselves.

Programs and events

The GNOME Project holds several community programs and events, usually tailored to local users and developers. The main gathering of GNOME contributors is the GNOME Users And Developers European Conference (GUADEC), an annual conference used to discuss the development and progress of GNOME.[4] The idea of GUADEC events is attributed to the GNOME developers' and users' Paris meeting of 1998.[5] An annual Asian conference called GNOME.Asia also exists.[6] GNOME also participated in the Desktop Summit, which is a joint conference organized by the GNOME and KDE communities that was held in Europe in 2009 and 2011.[7]

Among the project's community programs is Outreachy, established with the goals of increasing women participation and improving the resources available to all newcomers for getting involved in GNOME.[8]

Collaboration with other projects

The GNOME Project actively collaborates with other free software projects. Previous collaboration efforts were ordinarily organized on project-to-project basis.[9] To make the collaboration broader, the freedesktop.org project was founded.

Goals

The project focuses on:[10]

References

  1. "About Us | GNOME". Retrieved 2011-12-09.
  2. "GNU Software". Free Software Foundation. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
  3. "Membership of the GNOME foundation", GNOME Foundation, retrieved 2005-09-08
  4. GUADEC, The GNOME Project, retrieved 2011-12-03
  5. "About", GUADEC, retrieved 2011-12-03
  6. GNOME.Asia, The GNOME Project, retrieved 2015-08-20
  7. Larabel, Michael (2011-08-02), "Desktop Summit 2011: Copyright Assignment, Wayland & Beer", Phoronix, retrieved 2011-12-03
  8. "Support women participation in GNOME!", The GNOME Project, retrieved 2011-12-03
  9. Lehrbaum, Rick (2000-08-15), "GNOME community & industry leaders launch 5-point initiative", LinuxDevices, eWeek, archived from the original on 27 January 2013, retrieved 2011-12-10
  10. "About US". The GNOME Project. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
  11. 1 2 Day, Allan. "GNOME 3.12 Release Notes". The GNOME Project. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  12. "GNOME Languages". Damned Lies. The GNOME Project. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.