Woot. It is that time of the week^Wmonth^Wyear where we gather on IRC and take a hack at bugzilla in order to help make the next GNOME release higher quality. It's obviously been a while since we had these regularly (though there was a small one last week) and they are needed :) So, some information for those who haven't heard of our bug days: What is this thing you call 'bug day'? ========================== Bug day is a day we get together on IRC, find bugs, and clean bugzilla so that developers can get more work done by focusing on bugs that matter instead of duplicates, unconfirmable bugs, and things that they've already closed. Who can help at a bug day? ==================== Virtually anyone. Bug day can be for the very timid, the very quiet, or the very persistent. You do need: * decent ability to read English * a user-level knowledge of GNOME * 30 or so minutes of the day (the first time, after that you can do it in very small chunks.) You don't need: * any programming ability * any prior experience with QA * a deep understanding of GNOME. On the other hand, if you do have programming ability, it's also a great way to get involved- after a few bug days, you can figure out what needs help in gnome quickly and apply your talents there. What will we focus on? ================ Focus this week will be on unconfirmed bugs- reading them, marking them NEEDINFO if needed, confirming them if they are still in a newer release, finding duplicates, etc. Easy and fun. Where can I get more information? ========================= Bug days have a wiki page now: http://live.gnome.org/Bugsquad/BugDays _______________________________________________ gnome-list mailing list gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list