http://foss2serve.org/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Rdomanski&feedformat=atomFoss2Serve - User contributions [en]2024-03-29T08:26:46ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.18.1http://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-12-12T20:59:13Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Labs Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.<br />
<li><b>Sahara Eden Project: </b>This project has similar categories as Sugar Labs. It seems like all of these FOSS projects have a need for documentation, testing, and translation as much as they do for software development.<br />
<li>This FOSS project has much better organization of issues/bugs into categories, as well as very helpful information like priority levels and "status" to indicate if the issue has already been assigned to someone.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Nov 19, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap consists of milestones - each with a name - broken down by category, and there are listed future releases for longer term planning.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1B: Field Trip:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>There are 24,620 "education" repositories in <b>GitHub</b>.<br />
<li>Lists all of the commits with associated date.<br />
<li>There are 458 "humanitarian" repositories.<br />
<li>The last update was on October 24th.<br />
<li>There are 415 "disaster management" repositories.<br />
<li>There are 2,260 "education" projects returned in <b>OpenHub</b>.<br />
<li>Although projects can be found with the Git command, they are not on GitHub.<br />
<li>Four similar projects are listed.<br />
<li>Other information about the project includes Lines of Code, Number of Commits, and Number of Contributors.<br />
<li>There are approx. 30 projects for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management"<br />
<li>There is no activity information available on so many projects because of problems with their code locations or other problems blocking Open Hub from collecting and analyzing code.<br />
<li>Info on organizations includes: Most active, Newest, Orgs by 30 day volume, and Stats by Sector<br />
<li>OpenMRS Core had commits as recently as Feb 2018, but I'm unclear if that is just the last time the code was analyzed. Also possible is 4 years ago.<br />
<li>On GitHub, the last commit to OpenMRS Core was made 3 days ago.<br />
<li>These sites most likely have different information because the developers migrated over to GitHub.<br />
<li>Benefit to using both GitHub and OpenHub is increased discoverability; Drawback is publishing redundancy and version control.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
''' Responses to Stage 1B: Evaluate a Project:'''<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"<br />
|-<br />
! Evaluation Factor<br />
! Level<br/>(0-2)<br />
! style="width:60%;" | Evaluation Data<br />
|-<br />
| '''Licensing'''<br />
|<br />
|Mozilla Public License, version 2.0<br />
|-<br />
| '''Language'''<br />
|<br />
|Java 96.2%, SQLPL 2.9%, Other 0.9%<br />
|-<br />
| '''Level of Activity'''<br />
|<br />
|ACTIVE - a majority of the weeks each quarter had commits<br />
|-<br />
| '''Number of Contributors'''<br />
|<br />
|313 contributors<br />
|-<br />
| '''Product Size'''<br />
|<br />
|Unknown. I choose not to use Google Chrome and its extensions, and only use Firefox / Tor.<br />
|-<br />
| '''Issue Tracker'''<br />
|<br />
|1324 Ready for Work issues; 13,522 Closed issues; Fifth issue opened October 2013; It takes a long time for issues to be resolved.<br />
|-<br />
| '''New Contributor'''<br />
|<br />
|There is a "Get Involved" section with "Join the Community" links to talk or IRC. Lots of ways to get involved for developers including a step-by-step guide.<br />
|-<br />
| '''Community Norms'''<br />
|<br />
|Code of conduct is focused on technical issues like naming conventions, not really on Talk/communicative issues; I do not see any obvious cases of rude or inappropriate behavior. <br />
|-<br />
| '''User Base'''<br />
|<br />
|There does appear to be a large and active user base, and well-documented instructions for most topics.<br />
|-<br />
| '''Total Score'''<br />
|<br />
|Overall, OpenMRS seems like it would be a very suitable project for a course.<br />
|}</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-12-12T19:55:26Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Labs Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.<br />
<li><b>Sahara Eden Project: </b>This project has similar categories as Sugar Labs. It seems like all of these FOSS projects have a need for documentation, testing, and translation as much as they do for software development.<br />
<li>This FOSS project has much better organization of issues/bugs into categories, as well as very helpful information like priority levels and "status" to indicate if the issue has already been assigned to someone.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Nov 19, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap consists of milestones - each with a name - broken down by category, and there are listed future releases for longer term planning.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1B: Field Trip:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>There are 24,620 "education" repositories in <b>GitHub</b>.<br />
<li>Lists all of the commits with associated date.<br />
<li>There are 458 "humanitarian" repositories.<br />
<li>The last update was on October 24th.<br />
<li>There are 415 "disaster management" repositories.<br />
<li>There are 2,260 "education" projects returned in <b>OpenHub</b>.<br />
<li>Although projects can be found with the Git command, they are not on GitHub.<br />
<li>Four similar projects are listed.<br />
<li>Other information about the project includes Lines of Code, Number of Commits, and Number of Contributors.<br />
<li>There are approx. 30 projects for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management"<br />
<li>There is no activity information available on so many projects because of problems with their code locations or other problems blocking Open Hub from collecting and analyzing code.<br />
<li>Info on organizations includes: Most active, Newest, Orgs by 30 day volume, and Stats by Sector<br />
<li>OpenMRS Core had commits as recently as Feb 2018, but I'm unclear if that is just the last time the code was analyzed. Also possible is 4 years ago.<br />
<li>On GitHub, the last commit to OpenMRS Core was made 3 days ago.<br />
<li>These sites most likely have different information because the developers migrated over to GitHub.<br />
<li>Benefit to using both GitHub and OpenHub is increased discoverability; Drawback is publishing redundancy and version control.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
''' Responses to Stage 1B: Evaluate a Project:'''<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"<br />
|-<br />
! Evaluation Factor<br />
! Level<br/>(0-2)<br />
! style="width:60%;" | Evaluation Data<br />
|-<br />
| '''Licensing'''<br />
|<br />
|Mozilla Public License, version 2.0<br />
|-<br />
| '''Language'''<br />
|<br />
|Java 96.2%, SQLPL 2.9%, Other 0.9%<br />
|-<br />
| '''Level of Activity'''<br />
|<br />
|ACTIVE - a majority of the weeks each quarter had commits<br />
|-<br />
| '''Number of Contributors'''<br />
|<br />
|313 contributors<br />
|-<br />
| '''Product Size'''<br />
|<br />
|Unknown. I choose not to use Google Chrome and its extensions, and only use Firefox / Tor.<br />
|-<br />
| '''Issue Tracker'''<br />
|<br />
|1324 Ready for Work issues; 13,522 Closed issues; Fifth issue opened October 2013; It takes a long time for issues to be resolved.<br />
|-<br />
| '''New Contributor'''<br />
|<br />
|There is a "Get Involved" section with "Join the Community" links to talk or IRC. Lots of ways to get involved for developers including a step-by-step guide.<br />
|-<br />
| '''Community Norms'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''User Base'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Total Score'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|}</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-12-12T19:40:52Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Labs Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.<br />
<li><b>Sahara Eden Project: </b>This project has similar categories as Sugar Labs. It seems like all of these FOSS projects have a need for documentation, testing, and translation as much as they do for software development.<br />
<li>This FOSS project has much better organization of issues/bugs into categories, as well as very helpful information like priority levels and "status" to indicate if the issue has already been assigned to someone.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Nov 19, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap consists of milestones - each with a name - broken down by category, and there are listed future releases for longer term planning.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1B: Field Trip:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>There are 24,620 "education" repositories in <b>GitHub</b>.<br />
<li>Lists all of the commits with associated date.<br />
<li>There are 458 "humanitarian" repositories.<br />
<li>The last update was on October 24th.<br />
<li>There are 415 "disaster management" repositories.<br />
<li>There are 2,260 "education" projects returned in <b>OpenHub</b>.<br />
<li>Although projects can be found with the Git command, they are not on GitHub.<br />
<li>Four similar projects are listed.<br />
<li>Other information about the project includes Lines of Code, Number of Commits, and Number of Contributors.<br />
<li>There are approx. 30 projects for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management"<br />
<li>There is no activity information available on so many projects because of problems with their code locations or other problems blocking Open Hub from collecting and analyzing code.<br />
<li>Info on organizations includes: Most active, Newest, Orgs by 30 day volume, and Stats by Sector<br />
<li>OpenMRS Core had commits as recently as Feb 2018, but I'm unclear if that is just the last time the code was analyzed. Also possible is 4 years ago.<br />
<li>On GitHub, the last commit to OpenMRS Core was made 3 days ago.<br />
<li>These sites most likely have different information because the developers migrated over to GitHub.<br />
<li>Benefit to using both GitHub and OpenHub is increased discoverability; Drawback is publishing redundancy and version control.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
''' Responses to Stage 1B: Evaluate a Project:'''<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"<br />
|-<br />
! Evaluation Factor<br />
! Level<br/>(0-2)<br />
! style="width:60%;" | Evaluation Data<br />
|-<br />
| '''Licensing'''<br />
|<br />
|Mozilla Public License, version 2.0<br />
|-<br />
| '''Language'''<br />
|<br />
|Java 96.2%, SQLPL 2.9%, Other 0.9%<br />
|-<br />
| '''Level of Activity'''<br />
|<br />
|ACTIVE - a majority of the weeks each quarter had commits<br />
|-<br />
| '''Number of Contributors'''<br />
|<br />
|313 contributors<br />
|-<br />
| '''Product Size'''<br />
|<br />
|Unknown. I choose not to use Google Chrome and its extensions, and only use Firefox / Tor.<br />
|-<br />
| '''Issue Tracker'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''New Contributor'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Community Norms'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''User Base'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Total Score'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|}</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-12-12T19:32:00Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Labs Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.<br />
<li><b>Sahara Eden Project: </b>This project has similar categories as Sugar Labs. It seems like all of these FOSS projects have a need for documentation, testing, and translation as much as they do for software development.<br />
<li>This FOSS project has much better organization of issues/bugs into categories, as well as very helpful information like priority levels and "status" to indicate if the issue has already been assigned to someone.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Nov 19, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap consists of milestones - each with a name - broken down by category, and there are listed future releases for longer term planning.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1B: Field Trip:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>There are 24,620 "education" repositories in <b>GitHub</b>.<br />
<li>Lists all of the commits with associated date.<br />
<li>There are 458 "humanitarian" repositories.<br />
<li>The last update was on October 24th.<br />
<li>There are 415 "disaster management" repositories.<br />
<li>There are 2,260 "education" projects returned in <b>OpenHub</b>.<br />
<li>Although projects can be found with the Git command, they are not on GitHub.<br />
<li>Four similar projects are listed.<br />
<li>Other information about the project includes Lines of Code, Number of Commits, and Number of Contributors.<br />
<li>There are approx. 30 projects for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management"<br />
<li>There is no activity information available on so many projects because of problems with their code locations or other problems blocking Open Hub from collecting and analyzing code.<br />
<li>Info on organizations includes: Most active, Newest, Orgs by 30 day volume, and Stats by Sector<br />
<li>OpenMRS Core had commits as recently as Feb 2018, but I'm unclear if that is just the last time the code was analyzed. Also possible is 4 years ago.<br />
<li>On GitHub, the last commit to OpenMRS Core was made 3 days ago.<br />
<li>These sites most likely have different information because the developers migrated over to GitHub.<br />
<li>Benefit to using both GitHub and OpenHub is increased discoverability; Drawback is publishing redundancy and version control.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
''' Responses to Stage 1B: Evaluate a Project:'''<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"<br />
|-<br />
! Evaluation Factor<br />
! Level<br/>(0-2)<br />
! style="width:60%;" | Evaluation Data<br />
|-<br />
| '''Licensing'''<br />
|<br />
|Mozilla Public License, version 2.0<br />
|-<br />
| '''Language'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Level of Activity'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Number of Contributors'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Product Size'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Issue Tracker'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''New Contributor'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Community Norms'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''User Base'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Total Score'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|}</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-12-12T19:29:05Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Labs Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.<br />
<li><b>Sahara Eden Project: </b>This project has similar categories as Sugar Labs. It seems like all of these FOSS projects have a need for documentation, testing, and translation as much as they do for software development.<br />
<li>This FOSS project has much better organization of issues/bugs into categories, as well as very helpful information like priority levels and "status" to indicate if the issue has already been assigned to someone.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Nov 19, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap consists of milestones - each with a name - broken down by category, and there are listed future releases for longer term planning.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1B: Field Trip:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>There are 24,620 "education" repositories in <b>GitHub</b>.<br />
<li>Lists all of the commits with associated date.<br />
<li>There are 458 "humanitarian" repositories.<br />
<li>The last update was on October 24th.<br />
<li>There are 415 "disaster management" repositories.<br />
<li>There are 2,260 "education" projects returned in <b>OpenHub</b>.<br />
<li>Although projects can be found with the Git command, they are not on GitHub.<br />
<li>Four similar projects are listed.<br />
<li>Other information about the project includes Lines of Code, Number of Commits, and Number of Contributors.<br />
<li>There are approx. 30 projects for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management"<br />
<li>There is no activity information available on so many projects because of problems with their code locations or other problems blocking Open Hub from collecting and analyzing code.<br />
<li>Info on organizations includes: Most active, Newest, Orgs by 30 day volume, and Stats by Sector<br />
<li>OpenMRS Core had commits as recently as Feb 2018, but I'm unclear if that is just the last time the code was analyzed. Also possible is 4 years ago.<br />
<li>On GitHub, the last commit to OpenMRS Core was made 3 days ago.<br />
<li>These sites most likely have different information because the developers migrated over to GitHub.<br />
<li>Benefit to using both GitHub and OpenHub is increased discoverability; Drawback is publishing redundancy and version control.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
''' Responses to Stage 1B: Evaluate a Project:'''<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"<br />
|-<br />
! Evaluation Factor<br />
! Level<br/>(0-2)<br />
! style="width:60%;" | Evaluation Data<br />
|-<br />
| '''Licensing'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Language'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Level of Activity'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Number of Contributors'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Product Size'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Issue Tracker'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''New Contributor'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Community Norms'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''User Base'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| '''Total Score'''<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|}</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-12-12T19:24:28Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Labs Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.<br />
<li><b>Sahara Eden Project: </b>This project has similar categories as Sugar Labs. It seems like all of these FOSS projects have a need for documentation, testing, and translation as much as they do for software development.<br />
<li>This FOSS project has much better organization of issues/bugs into categories, as well as very helpful information like priority levels and "status" to indicate if the issue has already been assigned to someone.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Nov 19, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap consists of milestones - each with a name - broken down by category, and there are listed future releases for longer term planning.<br />
</ul><br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1B: Field Trip:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>There are 24,620 "education" repositories in <b>GitHub</b>.<br />
<li>Lists all of the commits with associated date.<br />
<li>There are 458 "humanitarian" repositories.<br />
<li>The last update was on October 24th.<br />
<li>There are 415 "disaster management" repositories.<br />
<li>There are 2,260 "education" projects returned in <b>OpenHub</b>.<br />
<li>Although projects can be found with the Git command, they are not on GitHub.<br />
<li>Four similar projects are listed.<br />
<li>Other information about the project includes Lines of Code, Number of Commits, and Number of Contributors.<br />
<li>There are approx. 30 projects for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management"<br />
<li>There is no activity information available on so many projects because of problems with their code locations or other problems blocking Open Hub from collecting and analyzing code.<br />
<li>Info on organizations includes: Most active, Newest, Orgs by 30 day volume, and Stats by Sector<br />
<li>OpenMRS Core had commits as recently as Feb 2018, but I'm unclear if that is just the last time the code was analyzed. Also possible is 4 years ago.<br />
<li>On GitHub, the last commit to OpenMRS Core was made 3 days ago.<br />
<li>These sites most likely have different information because the developers migrated over to GitHub.<br />
<li>Benefit to using both GitHub and OpenHub is increased discoverability; Drawback is publishing redundancy and version control.<br />
</ul></div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/Stage2_GroupsStage2 Groups2018-12-06T17:04:29Z<p>Rdomanski: /* Introductory Programming I */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTOC__<br />
<br />
='''Instructions:''' =<br />
During POSSE Stage 2, we will do a variety of small group exercises. To help organize the small groups, please sign up for one course and one project by entering your name below. We will organize groups based on available facilitator coverage and attendee interest.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Courses ==<br />
We know that undergraduate curriculum structure varies some across institutions, but do what you can to pick from the general course categories below.<br />
<br />
=== Introductory Programming I ===<br />
A first course for computing majors; typically with no computing course pre-requisites<br />
* Rob Domanski<br />
<br />
=== Introductory Programming II/Data Structures ===<br />
A second course for computing majors<br />
* Stewart Weiss<br />
<br />
=== Software Engineering/Capstone ===<br />
An advanced undergraduate course for computing majors; often involves a team project<br />
* <Name><br />
<br />
=== Stand-alone HFOSS/Openness ===<br />
An elective course that might be targeted at computing majors or non-majors; covers broader concepts of open source<br />
* Stewart Weiss<br />
* Elin Waring<br />
* Ying Zhou<br />
<br />
== Projects ==<br />
<br />
=== [https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools Firefox Developer Tools Accessibility] ===<br />
* Stewart Weiss<br />
* Ying Zhou<br />
<br />
=== [https://world.openfoodfacts.org/ Open Food Facts] ===<br />
* <Name><br />
<br />
=== [https://www.ushahidi.com/ Ushahidi] ===<br />
* <Name><br />
<br />
<!-- The projects below will not be covered in this POSSE --><br />
<!--<br />
=== [http://openmrs.org/ OpenMRS] ===<br />
* <Name><br />
<br />
=== [http://mifos.org/ Mifos] ===<br />
* <Name><br />
<br />
=== [https://sahanafoundation.org/ Sahana] ===<br />
* <name><br />
--><br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:POSSE]]</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:Rdomanski/User:Rdomanski/2018-12-06T16:28:56Z<p>Rdomanski: Created page with "http://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:Rdomanski"</p>
<hr />
<div>http://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:Rdomanski</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-20T21:30:46Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Labs Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.<br />
<li><b>Sahara Eden Project: </b>This project has similar categories as Sugar Labs. It seems like all of these FOSS projects have a need for documentation, testing, and translation as much as they do for software development.<br />
<li>This FOSS project has much better organization of issues/bugs into categories, as well as very helpful information like priority levels and "status" to indicate if the issue has already been assigned to someone.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Nov 19, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap consists of milestones - each with a name - broken down by category, and there are listed future releases for longer term planning.<br />
</ul></div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-20T20:07:30Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Responses to Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project:'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li><b>Sugar Lab Project: </b>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information on issues/bugs consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-20T20:02:17Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Notes on FOSS projects (Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project):'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li>The last commit was made on Oct 24, 2018<br />
<li>The Roadmap is updated at the start of each new release cycle.</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-20T19:58:54Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Notes on FOSS projects (Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project):'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li>The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
<li>To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
<li>There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
<li>The information consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.<br />
<li></div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-20T19:58:18Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Notes on FOSS projects (Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project):'''<br />
<ul><br />
<li>-- I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
<li><br />
-- The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
-- To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
-- There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
-- The information consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-20T19:57:37Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Notes on FOSS projects (Stage 1A: Intro to FOSS Project):'''<br />
-- I am rather surprised to see how many opportunities there are to contribute to FOSS projects that are non-technical.<br />
-- The roles most applicable to my students would be Developers, although there's no reason why they couldn't also be Content Writers, People Persons, or Translators.<br />
-- To submit a bug, you would go to https://github.com/sugarlabs, find the most applicable category, and click the Green button on the Issues tab.<br />
-- There are 308 repos in the Sugar Lab Project. I went to the "turtleart-activity" and saw only three open issues/bugs, sorted by date.<br />
-- The information consists only of the name of each issue/bug and the discussion thread associated with it.</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-20T19:18:38Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Notes on FOSS projects (Activity 1E):'''</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-14T19:01:12Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource<br />
<br />
'''Bio:''' I teach Computer Science, manage a program of others who teach Computer Science, and increasingly work on public policy as it relates to technology education.</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/POSSE_2019-01_ParticipantsPOSSE 2019-01 Participants2018-11-14T18:55:40Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>The participants in [[POSSE 2019-01]] are:<br />
* [[User:Darci.burdge|Darci Burdge]], Nassau Community College - email: Darci.Burdge@ncc.edu<br />
* [[User:Rdomanski|Robert Domanski]], NY City Government - email: Rdomanski at sbs.nyc.gov, Wiki page: [http://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:Rdomanski/ Rob's Wiki]<br />
* [[User:Heidi.ellis|Heidi Ellis]], Western New England University - email: ellis at wne.edu, Blog: [https://heidiellis.wordpress.com/ Heidi Ellis' blog]<br />
* [[User:Patricia.morreale|Patricia Morreale]], Kean University - email: pmorreal at kean.edu<br />
* [[User:Hunter.johnson|Hunter Johnson]], John Jay College, CUNY - email: hujohnson at jjay.cuny.edu<br />
* [[User:sfulakeza|Steven Fulakeza]], Lehman College College, CUNY - email: steven.fulakeza at lehman.cuny.edu</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-14T18:51:59Z<p>Rdomanski: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Name:''' Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
'''Position:''' Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
'''Email:''' Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
'''Website:''' http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
'''Blog:''' http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
'''Twitter:''' @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
'''GitHub:''' https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
'''IRC:''' server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource</div>Rdomanskihttp://foss2serve.org/index.php/User:RdomanskiUser:Rdomanski2018-11-14T18:51:14Z<p>Rdomanski: Created page with "Name: Robert Domanski Position: Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government Email: Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov Website: http://www.rdomanski.com Blog: http:/..."</p>
<hr />
<div>Name: Robert Domanski<br />
<br />
Position: Manager of the NYC Tech-in-Residence Corps, NY City Government<br />
<br />
Email: Rdomanski@sbs.nyc.gov<br />
<br />
Website: http://www.rdomanski.com<br />
<br />
Blog: http://thenerfherder.blogspot.com<br />
<br />
Twitter: @Rdomanski<br />
<br />
GitHub: https://github.com/RobbieD2R2<br />
<br />
IRC: server: freenode.net nick: Rob_Domanski channels: foss2serve, teachingopensource</div>Rdomanski