WMF is made up of individuals. If there's something that you think
should be done, why not figure out which team it would normally fall
under, and politely suggest it to the people on the team that they
should make it a priority (If it doesn't fall under any team - lets be
realistic, it probably won't be done)
They're either going to say yes or they're going to say no. The better
reasoned your argument for why its important, the more likely they are
going to say yes.
That said, gsoc/opw usually doesn't reflect Wikimedia community
priorities all that much (imo).
--
-bawolff
On 9/28/15, Pine W <wiki.pine(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Quim,
For projects that don't move forward in Outreachy for any reason, is there
a way of suggesting that the particularly useful open projects get WMF dev
time next quarter? It would be nice if there is a way to incorporate
community priorities into quarterly department goal setting.
Pine
On Sep 28, 2015 4:18 AM, "Quim Gil" <qgil(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
A new round of Outreachy is about to start and we
need mentors for
projects.
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Outreachy/Round_11
Mentors go first, because we haven't many confirmed for this round, and we
have already many possible project ideas:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/tag/possible-tech-projects/
Still, if you want to volunteer as mentor for a new project, the gates are
also wide open for you.
There are already several candidates looking for a project and asking for
microtasks to show their skills.
Questions? Just ask, here or at
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T112620
--
Quim Gil
Engineering Community Manager @ Wikimedia Foundation
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/User:Qgil
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