Differences between revisions 6 and 7
Revision 6 as of 2007-05-04 23:56:20
Size: 5358
Comment:
Revision 7 as of 2007-05-05 00:58:36
Size: 6516
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 10: Line 10:
You are not affraid to follow a strict development process (Debian Policy) evolved for many years targeting the best resulting systems. You are not affraid to follow a strict development process (Debian Policy [7] and related / derived policies [8]) evolved for many years targeting the best resulting systems.
Line 13: Line 13:
You want to create high quality solutions. The highest standards attainable. The reference others compare to. You want to create high quality solutions [9].

The highest standards attainable.

The reference others compare to.

Line 44: Line 50:

You have a place to guide you at the first steps [10] and a place to ask for hints [11] at initial phase.

Sure, you can talk with (almost) no one and only code [13]. Many skilled coders does not have (almost) any people communication skill. Some have unpredictable reactions to human contact or socializing. It is not an obligation. But you may miss some oportunities to teach and learn interesting things from / to other very skilled people like you. These already justifies some efforts to some minimal communication skill learning.
Line 88: Line 98:
Debian Project even has a team dedicated to improve the quality [9].
Line 101: Line 112:
 *[7] Debian Policy http://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy
 *[8] Debian Developer Corner http://www.debian.org/devel/
 *[9] Debian Quality Assurance team http://qa.debian.org/
 *[10] Debian Mentors http://mentors.debian.net
 *[11] Debian mentors mailing list http://lists.debian.org/debian-mentors/
 *[12] Five geek social fallacies http://sean.chittenden.org/humor/www.plausiblydeniable.com/opinion/gsf.html
 *[13] Asperger's syndrome http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asperger_syndrome

?TableOfContents()

Is Debian Project a home for my programming skills?

It depends on your developer characteristics and skill.

For maximum results and satisfaction, it is better to have many or all characteristics below.

Want to do things the right way

You have pride of your well done work. No low quality short cuts. Do not want ugly hacks. No lazy programming. You want to create technically sound solutions.

You are not affraid to follow a strict development process (Debian Policy [7] and related / derived policies [8]) evolved for many years targeting the best resulting systems.

Want to create and implement the best solution

You want to create high quality solutions [9].

The highest standards attainable.

The reference others compare to.

Want to learn a lot every day

You are not affraid of reading really LOTS of documentation before asking. You do your homework before.

You are not affraid of asking for help and hints from other developers to learn different approaches.

You are willing to try different solutions in programming. Not affraid of non-ortodoxus ways of thinking.

You are a commited people

Users depend on your work.

Other developers depend on your work.

Community depends on your work.

Debian Project depends on your work.

Are you willing to be there when needed?

You are a disciplined people for the work

You may like and practice radical sports. Or defend unusual ways of living, politcs, religions,etc. It does not matter at Debian Project (written in the Debian Social Contract [0]).

But Debian Policy needs a disciplined developer for the work.

Able to work into a community

It is highly recommendable you have enough social skill to work in communities or at least small groups and teams.

Debian Project has some guides [5] and rules [3], [0] that warrant your rights [4] and tell you some limitations for working and living into a social group.

You have rights and duties [6] for a peaceful and productive work and learning experience.

You have a place to guide you at the first steps [10] and a place to ask for hints [11] at initial phase.

Sure, you can talk with (almost) no one and only code [13]. Many skilled coders does not have (almost) any people communication skill. Some have unpredictable reactions to human contact or socializing. It is not an obligation. But you may miss some oportunities to teach and learn interesting things from / to other very skilled people like you. These already justifies some efforts to some minimal communication skill learning.

Want to work in the Project not for money

Debian Project is not for profit entity. Maybe you get some (temporary?) financial sponsoring from third parties. Or your employer pays you in order to push foward some working solution. Or your company wants to reduce development and maintenance risks offering code to the Debian Project and invoicing your customers for technical support. Or you work on some programming bounties. Or got a kind of Summer of Code sponsoring.

But Debian Project was founded on pure community spirit and do not have resources for paying you. Debian Project has limited resources coming from donations and sponsoring. Most of developers do not work on Debian Project for any (direct) money. You have to have other (direct) work motivations. It is not cast in stone, but the "Debian culture" accepts sponsoring companies, donations, some indirect funding (travel, hosting, machines...), employers funding, etc.

You will not work for free for a company.

Not affraid of hard work

What are Debian Project advantages for a developer?

The ["WhyDebian"] applies for you. And more.

Social Contract

Debian Project has a social contract [0] and a Constitution [3] and it is not a commercial entity, nor controlled by one.

Debian Project is not controlled by a board of investors, or board of directors (it is a meritocracy with yearly elected leader), or a benevolent dictator, or a private owner.

It does not have to pursue profits, nor practice censorship for commercial advantages [1], nor can go out of business (it is not even a business)[2]. It can not be sold, nor go bankrupt.

Debian Project does not want to sell you anything, nor invoice you anything.

Debian Project does not change directions at market profit trends. Does not abandon users in light of profit margins or trends. It does not want to "milk" users as hostages, forcing continuous un-needed upgrades, or have programmed obsolescence to keep profits.

You will not work for free for a company.

Nor will be dependent of sponsorship goodwill from a specific (steering) company / sponsor / donator / group. And eager to appease them.

Debian Policy

The enforced Debian Policy is the real technical differential of Debian Project. And it is practiced by the developers. The tools and infrastructure only ease the repetitive work, freeing the developer to the really creative work and clever programming. Following the Debian Policy, developers can achieve the high standards the distribution are known of.

Developer tool chain

Project infrastructure

Debian Project even has a team dedicated to improve the quality [9].

Developer community

Useful links

CategoryDeveloper