Version 82 (modified by anonymous, 17 years ago) ( diff )

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September 2007 Django sprint

On Friday, Sept. 14, 2007, we're going to have a sprint to try and reduce the open ticket count. See the original announcement to django-dev for some details.

Developers around the world, both new and experienced, have already expressed much interest in participating, so there should be people available to help in most time zones.

What is a sprint?

Basically, a Django sprint is an excuse for people to focus their undivided attention, for a set time frame, on improving Django. We'll communicate via the Internet, and the people in Chicago and Mountain View (if, indeed, that option pans out) will just have a focused place to gather, along with better communication and the other benefits of face-to-face interaction.

Anybody can participate and contribute, and there's no obligation or expectation. If you've never contributed to Django before, this is the perfect chance for you to chip in.

To do

Between now and next Friday (or on the day), we need to

  • Create an IRC channel for the event.
  • Write up a list of things that newcomers can do, particularly how to help triaging bugs.
  • Work out a way to easily pass "possibly ready" bugs to people with commit privileges.

Attendees

In person (Chicago, USA -- at Google Chicago)

  • Matt Dorn
  • Adrian Holovaty
  • Deryck Hodge
  • Adam Jenkins (if it's at Google)
  • Jacob Kaplan-Moss
  • Joseph Kocherhans
  • Chris McAvoy
  • Paul Smith
  • Clint Ecker (if at Google)
  • Jake Elliott
  • Tamas Kemenczy

In person (Mountain View, Calif., USA -- at Google main HQ)

  • David Cramer
  • Brian Harring

Online

Add your name below, in alphabetical order by first name (as no one did order it by last name ;) -- Florian Apolloner )

  • Wiliam Alves de Souza (Brazil)
  • James Bennett (Kansas, USA)
  • Koen Biermans (Belgium, Europe)
  • Matt Boersma (Boulder, CO, USA)
  • Justin Bronn (Houston, TX, USA)
  • Jan Češpivo (Prague, Czech Republic)
  • Eric Brown (Tampa, FL, USA)
  • Florian Apolloner (Klagenfurt, Austria)
  • Niels Sandholt Busch (Copenhagen, Denmark)
  • Keith Bussell (Los Angeles, CA, USA)
  • Nick Efford (UK)
  • Ben Ford (Indonesia, GMT +6)
  • Marc Garcia (Barcelona, Europe)
  • Dimitris Glezos (UK)
  • Simon Greenhill (Auckland, New Zealand)
  • Russell Keith-Magee (Perth, Australia)
  • Jan Killian (Prague, Czech Republic)
  • Honza Král (Prague, Czech Republic)
  • Bruce Kroeze (Portland, OR)
  • Nicola Larosa (Italy)
  • Jannis Leidel (Germany)
  • Simon Litchfield (Gold Coast, Australia)
  • Allagappan M (Bangalore, India)
  • Michael Mao (Vancouver, Canada)
  • Mitja Martini (Berlin, Germany)
  • Matt McClanahan (Portland, OR, US)
  • Andrews Medina (Brazil)
  • Elliot Murphy (Florida, USA)
  • Craig Ogg (Long Beach, California, USA)
  • Vivek Puri (Singapore)
  • Michael Radziej (Germany)
  • Jeromie Rand (Greenville, SC, USA)
  • Frankie Robertson (UK)
  • Brian Rosner (Denver, CO, USA)
  • Ville Säävuori (Finland)
  • Ilya Semenov (Russia)
  • Suriya Subramanian (Austin, Texas, USA)
  • Tyler Tarabula (New York, NY, USA)
  • James Tauber (Boston, MA, USA)
  • Malcolm Tredinnick (Sydney, Australia)
  • Nathaniel Whiteinge (Ogden, UT)
  • Simon Willison (Brighton, UK)
  • Gary Wilson (Texas, USA)
  • Martin Winkler (Austria)
  • Fredrik Sundqvist (Sweden)
  • Wilane Ousmane (Dakar, Senegal)
  • Gallego Pang (China)
  • Vikrant Rathore (Shanghai, China or Hong Kong)
  • Shu Cho (Nanking, China, GMT +8)
  • KS Jun (Seoul, Korea, GMT +9)
  • Grzegorz Ślusarek (Poland)
  • Aaron Lee (Shanghai, China)
  • Placid (UK)
  • Spike Bae (Korea)
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