Welcome to the GNOME Wiki!
This is GNOME's development and community organization space. To learn how to use the wiki, see the Guidelines.
A number of GNOME hosted applications. |
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GNOME components or software projects. |
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Some of the well organized teams in the project. |
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GNOME is always holding events of different shapes and sizes. |
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GNOME-wide software initiatives. |
Contributing to GNOME
Want to help make GNOME awesome? We have plenty of advice and information for you.
GNOME Love provides an introductory guide to getting started at GNOME development.
GNOME Women has support and advice for women wanting to get involved in GNOME; there are also internships available as a part of the GNOME Outreach Program for Women.
Summer internships for GNOME are provided by Google Summer of Code.
Getting in Touch
IRC - for instant messaging
Planet GNOME - aggregated blog posts of GNOME contributors.
GNOME News Feed - official news posts from www.gnome.org
Development Resources
GNOME Bugzilla is our issue tracking system.
You can browse our development code on git.gnome.org
A guide to using Git version control when doing GNOME development.
Hardware which is used for testing and working on GNOME; some belongs to the Foundation, it can be lent to the community for development and testing
Community
The GNOME Foundation supports and guides the GNOME Project; please join if you are a contributor.
If you're a member of the GNOME community, you should put your name on the GNOME World Wide Map
Join a GNOME user group.
Other Interesting Things
GNOMEs love to eat. They've even written a cookbook.