[kde-community] Tupi: Open 2D Magic

Valorie Zimmerman valorie.zimmerman at gmail.com
Sat Dec 28 22:26:40 GMT 2013


Wonderful!

On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 6:46 AM, Aaron J. Seigo <aseigo at kde.org> wrote:
> On Monday, December 23, 2013 00:14:13 Gustav González wrote:
>> So guys, what is the next step we should take to join the KDE community?
>
> First off: Tupi looks *awesome* .. nicely done :)
>
> You’ve probably already seen the KDE Manifesto:
>
>         http://manifesto.kde.org/
>
> That pretty much sums up the commitments and benefits. The big one for Tupi
> probably is to migrate the home of the primary git repo from github.com to
> git.kde.org.
>
> To do that, your developers need to apply for a commit account on
> https://identity.kde.org/ and then someone should add the Tupi git repository
> to their scratch area, following the directions here:
>
>         http://community.kde.org/Sysadmin/GitKdeOrgManual
>
> and then make a sys admin request here:
>
>         https://sysadmin.kde.org/tickets/index.php?page=tickets&act=add
>
> to move the repository to a proper home (probably in extragear, perhaps in
> artwork?). You can browse the repository structure here:
>
>         https://projects.kde.org/projects
>
> with extragear here:
>
>         https://projects.kde.org/projects/extragear
>
> I look forward to seeing Tupi part of the KDE community :)
>
> --
> Aaron J. Seigo

To piggyback on Aaron's good suggestion, there are other ways to
'snuggle in' with the KDE community. We have awesome wikis for you to
use, Community for your own team planning, notes and such, Userbase
for Handbooks, tutorials, and other user documentation, and Techbase
for devel documentation.

You might open a section in the Forums; many users find this the best
way to ask questions or present their work, and the Tupi community can
easily run contests, open up threads about sharing of user-created
graphics and such. I see there is already quite a bit of Krita+Tupi
action there now. :-) Your existing forums can be moved to the KDE
infra if you want.

Do you report bugs on bugs.kde.org? It's an awesome system, and we
have great bug triagers.

Have you a list for users and/or developers? Our list system is great,
with lots of help available to expunge spam, etc.

Finally, do you want an IRC channel? Join us in #kde-ops to get one set up.

I'm not suggesting that you do all of these! But these are all options
that the KDE community has developed to help teams out.

All the best,

Valorie
-- 
http://about.me/valoriez



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