User:Nanette.veilleux
Nanette Veilleux is a Professor in the Computer Science and Informatics Program at Simmons College. Simmons is a small women's college. The CS program, somewhat unusually, is housed in the School of Library and Information Sciences which, oddly enough, helps us attract young women.
Simmons undergraduate requirements include two semesters of independent learning and our students usually are involved in REU's, faculty led research or their own projects. As has been reported, women students are attracted to socially relevant projects and HFOSS will be interesting to them.
I believe the assignment requested that we post "answers" to the discussion about two ongoing projects. I'm doing so now but will probably remove this text in a couple of weeks:
Sugar: A commonality in the various teams is the request for thoughtful committment, e.g. don't go signing up for things you don't mean to do. The bug page on Sugar had defects and (requested) enhancements, in various stage of address: accepted through new. Release and road map: the roadmap (the link goes to an empty page) seems to be an overview of schedules and tasks. The release is actually a structured set of release dates by which collaborators have to have made changes.
Sahana Eden, in comparison: Sugar had a larger structure that included an oversight board. The activities on Sahana are basically the same though: there seem to be a variety of planning activities (blueprints, etc.) that seem to ask contributors to collectively bring a notion to a specification. In comparison, Sugar had more instantiated activities rather than pre-release blueprints. In addition there are the usual large and small coding activities including original authoring and bug fixing. Post code there are activities for intentional and accidental testers. The bug fix section on Sugar was populated and it was easier to see the options for bug fixing. The roadmap for Sahana does not seem to be tied to a specific release date but is a list of tasks (fairly unprioritized) with assignments (or not).