Upgrade to Pro
— share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …
Speaker Deck
Features
Speaker Deck
PRO
Sign in
Sign up for free
Search
Search
Open Source from the Trenches
Search
Chris Aniszczyk
February 12, 2010
Programming
0
75
Open Source from the Trenches
How to get involved and be successful in open source land.
Chris Aniszczyk
February 12, 2010
Tweet
Share
More Decks by Chris Aniszczyk
See All by Chris Aniszczyk
Open Source Under Attack (FOSDEM 2020)
caniszczyk
1
560
Bringing an open source project to the Linux Foundation
caniszczyk
0
50
Rise of Open Source Programs
caniszczyk
0
60
The Open Container Initiative (OCI) at 12 Months
caniszczyk
0
350
Creating an Open Source Office: Lessons from Twitter
caniszczyk
0
160
Mesos: Ignite Talk at #DevopsDaysAustin 2015
caniszczyk
0
110
The Open Source... Behind the Tweets
caniszczyk
0
70
Apache Mesos at Twitter
caniszczyk
3
150
#OSS2014
caniszczyk
0
210
Other Decks in Programming
See All in Programming
KANNA Android の技術的課題と取り組み
watabee
0
170
プロフェッショナルとしての成長「問題の深掘り」が導く真のスキルアップ / issue-analysis-and-skill-up
minodriven
8
1.9k
Memory API : Patterns, Performance et Cas d'Utilisation
josepaumard
1
160
ComposeでWebアプリを作る技術
tbsten
0
130
2025-04-25 GitHub Copilot Agent ライブデモ(スクリプト)
goataka
0
100
音声プラットフォームのアーキテクチャ変遷から学ぶ、クラウドネイティブなバッチ処理 (20250422_CNDS2025_Batch_Architecture)
thousanda
0
380
Lambda(Python)の リファクタリングが好きなんです
komakichi
4
230
Fiber Scheduler vs. General-Purpose Parallel Client
hayaokimura
1
280
Ruby's Line Breaks
yui_knk
4
2.7k
RuboCop: Modularity and AST Insights
koic
2
2.3k
個人開発の学生アプリが企業譲渡されるまで
akidon0000
2
1.1k
2ヶ月で生産性2倍、お買い物アプリ「カウシェ」4チーム同時改善の取り組み
ike002jp
1
110
Featured
See All Featured
Designing Experiences People Love
moore
142
24k
Put a Button on it: Removing Barriers to Going Fast.
kastner
60
3.8k
ReactJS: Keep Simple. Everything can be a component!
pedronauck
667
120k
It's Worth the Effort
3n
184
28k
Art, The Web, and Tiny UX
lynnandtonic
298
20k
Raft: Consensus for Rubyists
vanstee
137
6.9k
10 Git Anti Patterns You Should be Aware of
lemiorhan
PRO
656
60k
Optimising Largest Contentful Paint
csswizardry
37
3.2k
How GitHub (no longer) Works
holman
314
140k
Building Applications with DynamoDB
mza
94
6.4k
Designing for Performance
lara
608
69k
Product Roadmaps are Hard
iamctodd
PRO
52
11k
Transcript
Open Source from the Trenches How to get involved and
be successful Chris Aniszczyk - @cra http://aniszczyk.org
Who the hell am I and why should you listen
to me?
Eclipse hacker/evangelist at Red Hat Involved heavily at Eclipse. From
committing to leading Eclipse Foundation Board of Directors Hacking on open source for the last several years... Gentoo Linux, Eclipse, Fedora, etc... IBM -> Self Employed -> EclipseSource -> Red Hat I get paid to work on open source software
Why are we here? Well, a student approached me recently
with a question...
“How do I get involved with open source and get
good at it so I can get a job?”
At first, I was like... WTF What do I know?
He said there’s no practical “getting started with open source” guide out there...
He wants practical advice... If I’m giving advice, I’ll do
it the open source way and share it with the world
My advice? Find your passion. Contribute to it. Brand yourself.
Find the right open source project
Find open source projects that are newbie-friendly Don’t get distracted
with SF.net and other project hosting sites...
Look at Google’s Summer of Code list of mentoring organizations...
http://socghop.appspot.com/gsoc/program/accepted_orgs/google/gsoc2010
These organizations have already been vetted and tend to be
more welcoming to new contributors Which brings me to my next point...
Mentors, Mentors, Mentors
I believe having a mentor is crucial to your success
in getting involved with open source... Without a mentor you’ll waste precious time...
There are a open source projects out there that have
mentoring programs... http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mentors http://www.eclipse.org/soc https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MOTU/Mentoring Take advantage of them!
Are you a student? Do Google’s Summer of Code* program!
http://code.google.com/soc/ *you get paid to hack on open source, that’s beer money!
Contribute to your passion
Many open source projects are meritocracies In order to get
involved, you have to contribute and build your repertoire
So simply do the work by finding bugs you can
fix Your mentor can help you find some low hanging fruit...
Remember, there are many ways to contribute outside of code...
If you like books, this can give you an insight
on how some OSS projects are ran http://producingoss.com/
Get an ohloh.net account Track your passions...
Brand yourself
This may be odd to hear for developers, but you
are a brand and you should control your image
Everyone is watching... http://www.switched.com/2007/11/13/lying-male-intern-busted-in-a-dress-on-facebook/
Like your peers... And any future employers... http://bhc3.wordpress.com/2009/03/17/how-to-tweet-your-way-out-of-a-job/
In open source land, things are done in the open
Be mindful about it Avoid negativity at all costs and kill people with kindness
If no one can find you, how you can expect
to be successful in an environment that is all about being open?
Get a website & blog Get on Twitter Get on
GitHub.com Get on IRC Get on LinkedIn.com Share your passion with the world via conversations
In the end, the point is that you have to
understand you’re a brand and if you want to help your open source career, you need to be findable
You should brand yourself for the career you want, not
the job you currently have
Networking is important The opposite of networking is NOT WORKING
Networking is one of the most important things you can
do for yourself Build a network via conferences and online interactions
Attend conferences, tweetups and meetups There is no better way
to connect to folks than sharing a frosty beverage in person
Thanks for listening I hope my advice helps Questions? Chris
Aniszczyk http://aniszczyk.org http://twitter.com/cra