Hi!

I want to become a volunteer in QA and Development Tasks i have experience with 15 years in IT. Actually i'am partner of my own firm of IT consulting. But iam very exiting to participate in a projec only for my developer spirit.

Regards.

El 15/02/13 07:30, Rob Weir escribió:
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:15 PM, Luis Ortiz <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank You Rob:

I'm interest is develope, I have 15 years of experience in Linux, Windows,
Java, C, C++ what can i do for join me tu us maybe with small tasks maybe
debugging or solving small problems?

Hello Luis,

For technical people Development or QA are good places.  In our
Introduction to Development page [1] we have a section called "Finding
Easy Tasks" that you should review.  When we receive bug reports from
users we try to classify them by difficulty level.  The ones marked
"easy" or "simple" are good places to start.  For example, we have 21
bugs marked "easy" right now.

If you want to help with these tasks, the first step is to set up a
build environment for OpenOffice, download the source and produce a
build.  More information on that is in the Introduction to Development
page [1] as well.


[1] http://openoffice.apache.org/orientation/intro-development.html

Regards,

-Rob

I'n a few words in wich form can i help the project?

El 14/02/13 18:39, Rob Weir escribió:

On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 7:16 PM, Luis Ortiz <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi

I want to become a volunteer for the development or another tasks of the
project but i don't understand if i need firs introduce myself in the dev
and next sign up on the wikis.

What is the correct process for that.

Hello Luis,

Welcome to the Apache OpenOffice project!

We have quite a few mailing lists for the project, including this list
(main dev list) as well as lists for documentation, QA, marketing,
translation, etc.  We also have several native-language lists.  These
mailing lists are described here:

http://openoffice.apache.org/mailing-lists.html

and

http://openoffice.apache.org/native-lang.html

So one approach is to simply sign up for the mailing list(s) that
interest you and introduce yourself on each one.

Another approach, more methodical, is to review our "New Volunteer
Orientation" modules:

http://openoffice.apache.org/orientation/index.html

Those pages will teach you more about the project, how we work, what
the various project areas are, how to get started, etc.

For example, if you are interested in the coding side, this page has
the information to help you get started:

http://openoffice.apache.org/orientation/intro-development.html

Regards,

-Rob


I apreciate the help.

Thanks a lot.


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