On 2006-06-27, bio_enthusiast <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I was wondering how to go about starting an open source > project for doing routine biological problems?
Generally you either start writing code to fulfill a need of yours, or you pay somebody else to write it for you. > There is a plethora of scripts and a fairly large biopython > project to back up anyone who tried, these however cater to > the bioinformatics community and it loses the vast majority of > the wet-lab scientists. How can someone who is used to writing > small scripts and doing wet-lab work contribute to the open > source community? For existing projects, you can help a lot by submitting good bug reports, documentation enhancements or translations, patches, etc. > Starting software projects seems to be the domain of people > with much more experience and skill but there are some serious > needs by people who do not have the skills to upkeep any > software based project. That's what money is for. People with no need for (or interest in) program X (and indeed don't even know about the need) aren't going to write program X unless you pay them to. You could try to recruit some SW types to write the code for free, but they're probably already busy working on OSS projects that they need/want. There are sites where you can offer "bounties" as incentives for people to work on the OSS you want them to work on. -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Are you still at SEXUALLY ACTIVE? Did you visi.com BRING th' REINFORCEMENTS? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list