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「Why do People Join the Mozilla Community?」修訂間的差異

出自 MozTW Wiki

 
行 1: 行 1:
= Why People Join the Mozilla Community? =
 
 
 
Many people unfamiliar with open source may dismiss the bulk of the community as a anti-microsoft, anti-capitalist student body. These people have not experienced the power of an open community first-hand. Finding free hours to do volunteer works is though, but many long-time contributors stay committed because of the encouragement, strong peer support, and learning the community has provided.
 
Many people unfamiliar with open source may dismiss the bulk of the community as a anti-microsoft, anti-capitalist student body. These people have not experienced the power of an open community first-hand. Finding free hours to do volunteer works is though, but many long-time contributors stay committed because of the encouragement, strong peer support, and learning the community has provided.
  

於 2005年4月26日 (二) 14:18 的修訂

Many people unfamiliar with open source may dismiss the bulk of the community as a anti-microsoft, anti-capitalist student body. These people have not experienced the power of an open community first-hand. Finding free hours to do volunteer works is though, but many long-time contributors stay committed because of the encouragement, strong peer support, and learning the community has provided.

Here are some quotes from our contributors:

Ali Ebrahim 
The Mozilla community is wonderful, and is what makes spending time on Mozilla worthwhile for me. I know that without the Mozilla community on IRC and MozillaZine, I would never have gotten involved in Firefox QA.
Jesse Ruderman 
Some more things that encouranged me to continue contributing:
Josh Aas 
Its funny to see my name on the tinderbox checkins after all of these years... Its not really a big deal, but I can't help feeling like it symbolizes how far I've come from the days when I thought tinderbox was just an annoying sidebar in Mozilla M14. I owe a lot to other Mozilla developers (and Camino developers in particular), but I especially need to thank Mike Pinkerton. He has spent a very generous amount of his time making me a better developer over the past year or two.
Daniel Wang 
Feedbacks: In fact, I remember I first got started because of the little feedbacks I got from Brant Langer Gurganus, Gerv, bz, and maybe others I've missed in bugzilla.mozilla.org. You guys may think of it as nothing, but knowing that someone does care means a lot to a new comer. Well, here I get a lot of feedbacks, in forms of private messages, blogs, blog comments, and ratings. It's fun seeing how one idea gets propagated and expanded.
Gervase Markham 
I didn't think I had the "31337 coding skillz" to get involved in a free software project, but I found a page on mozilla.org about getting involved in their QA organisation, so I did that. Being involved with QA let me get well acquainted with the product without being intimidated, and now I'm one of their more senior QA volunteers - I now maintain that "getting involved with QA" page :-). I am also beginning to get stuck into bug fixing of the code itself (I posted my first one-line patch this morning.)
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