Tag Archives: programs

Season of Docs announces 2020 technical writing projects

Season of Docs has announced the technical writers participating in the program and their projects! You can view a list of organizations and technical writing projects on the website.

The program received over 500 technical writer applications, and with them, over 800 technical writing project proposals. The enthusiasm from the technical writing and open source communities has been amazing!

What is next?

During the community bonding period from August 17 to September 13, mentors must work with the technical writers to prepare them for the doc development phase. By the end of community bonding, the technical writer should be familiar with the open source project and community, understand the product as a whole, establish communication channels with the mentoring organization, and set clear goals and expectations for the project. These are critical to the successful completion of the technical writing project.

Documentation development begins on September 14, 2020.

What is Season of Docs?

Documentation is essential to the adoption of open source projects as well as to the success of their communities. Season of Docs brings together technical writers and open source projects to foster collaboration and improve documentation in the open source space. You can find out more about the program on the introduction page of the website.

During the program, technical writers spend a few months working closely with an open source community. They bring their technical writing expertise to the project's documentation and, at the same time, learn about the open source project and new technologies.

The open source projects work with the technical writers to improve the project's documentation and processes. Together, they may choose to build a new documentation set, redesign the existing docs, or improve and document the project's contribution procedures and onboarding experience.

General timeline
August 16Google announces the accepted technical writer projects
August 17 - September 13Community bonding: Technical writers get to know mentors and the open source community, and refine their projects in collaboration with their mentors
September 14 - December 5Technical writers work with open source mentors on the accepted projects, and submit their work at the end of the period
January 6, 2021Google publishes the list of successfully-completed projects

See the full timeline for details, including the provision for projects that run longer than three months.

Find out more

Explore the Season of Docs website at g.co/seasonofdocs to learn more about the program. Use our logo and other promotional resources to spread the word. Check out the FAQ for further questions!

By Kassandra Dhillon and Erin McKean, Program Managers, Google Open Source Programs Office

Announcing the 2020 first quarter Google Open Source Peer Bonus winners

We are very pleased to announce the latest Google Open Source Peer Bonus winners and their projects.

The Google Open Source Peer Bonus rewards external open source contributors nominated by Googlers for their exceptional contributions to open source. Historically, the program was primarily focused on rewarding developers. Over the years the program has evolved—rewarding not just software engineers but all types of contributors—including technical writers, user experience and graphic designers, community managers and marketers, mentors and educators, ops and security experts. 

In support of diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives worldwide, we had decided to devote this cycle to amazing women in open source, especially since it coincided with celebrating International Women’s Day on March 8. We are very excited and pleased to share the following statistics with you.

We have 56 winners this cycle representing 17 countries all over the world: Australia, Belgium, Canada, Estonia, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, United Kingdom, and the United States.

Even though the cycle was open to ALL contributors, the number of female nominees went up from 8% to 25% in comparison to the previous cycle. That’s an amazing number celebrating amazing women!

Also, we are very pleased to see the number of docs contributors increase from 7% to 15%. Documentation is the #1 factor for project adoption, so this shift is very important and encouraging. To strengthen this trend and emphasize the importance of documentation in open source, the next cycle will be devoted (but not limited!) to docs contributors.

Below is the list of current winners who gave us permission to thank them publicly:
WinnerProject
Matt Mower
AMP HTML
Sergey Zakharov
Android Open Source Project
Pawel Kozlowski
Angular
Jakob Homan
Apache Airflow, Apache Kafka, Apache Hadoop
Chad Dombrova
Apache Beam
Myrle Krantz
Apache Software Foundation - Diversity and Inclusion committee + board
Katia Rojas
Apache Software Foundation Outreachy Program
Greg Hesp
assistant-relay
Beka Westberg
Blockly
Siebrand Mazeland
Blockly Games
Dave Mielke
BRLTTY
Vijay Hiremath
Chromium; platform/ec
Daniel Stenberg
curl / libcurl
Simon Binder
Dart build system
Aloďs Deniel
device_preview
Fatima Sarah Khalid
Drupal
Gregory Popovitch
Filament
Amr Yousef
Flutter
Remi Rousselet
Flutter
Pooja Bhaumik
Flutter
Elijah Newren
Git
Roger Peppe
Go
Oleksandr Porunov
JanusGraph
Tim Bannister
Kubernetes
June Yi
Kubernetes
Karen Bradshaw
Kubernetes
James Le Cuirot
leptonica
Stefan Weil
leptonica
Egor Pugin
leptonica
Bert Frees
LibLouis
Christian Egli
LibLouis
Richard Hughes
Linux Vendor Firmware Service (LVFS)
James (purpleidea)
mgmt
Mike Ryan
NgRx
Stefano Bonicatti
osquery
Alyssa Rosenzweig
panfrost
Carol Willing
Project Jupyter
Mariatta Wijaya
Python programming language
Alexander Neumann
restic
Nicholas Jamieson
rxjs (core member), rxjs-tslint-rules, rxjs-etc, ts-action
Kate Temkin
Several, mostly educational (see in Reasons)
Alyssa Ross
SpectrumOS / Nix
Rosalind Benoit
Spinnaker
Brian Le
Spinnaker
Vincent Demeester
Tekton
Chmouel Boudjnah
Tekton
Andrea Frittoli
Tekton
Simon Kaegi
Tekton
Cameron Shorter
The Good Docs Project
Ando Saabas
TreeInterpreter
Daz Wilkin
Trillian, Prometheus Exporter for GCP, KeyTransparency , OpenCensus
Gerrit Birkeland
typedoc
Wilson Snyder
Verilator
Thomas Oster
VisiCut
Koen Kanters
zigbee2mqtt
Jia Li
Zone.js
Congratulations to our winners! We look forward to your continued support and contributions to open source!

By Maria Tabak, Google Open Source

Announcing the 2020 first quarter Google Open Source Peer Bonus winners

We are very pleased to announce the latest Google Open Source Peer Bonus winners and their projects.

The Google Open Source Peer Bonus rewards external open source contributors nominated by Googlers for their exceptional contributions to open source. Historically, the program was primarily focused on rewarding developers. Over the years the program has evolved—rewarding not just software engineers but all types of contributors—including technical writers, user experience and graphic designers, community managers and marketers, mentors and educators, ops and security experts. 

In support of diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives worldwide, we had decided to devote this cycle to amazing women in open source, especially since it coincided with celebrating International Women’s Day on March 8. We are very excited and pleased to share the following statistics with you.

We have 56 winners this cycle representing 17 countries all over the world: Australia, Belgium, Canada, Estonia, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, United Kingdom, and the United States.

Even though the cycle was open to ALL contributors, the number of female nominees went up from 8% to 25% in comparison to the previous cycle. That’s an amazing number celebrating amazing women!

Also, we are very pleased to see the number of docs contributors increase from 7% to 15%. Documentation is the #1 factor for project adoption, so this shift is very important and encouraging. To strengthen this trend and emphasize the importance of documentation in open source, the next cycle will be devoted (but not limited!) to docs contributors.

Below is the list of current winners who gave us permission to thank them publicly:
WinnerProject
Matt Mower
AMP HTML
Sergey Zakharov
Android Open Source Project
Pawel Kozlowski
Angular
Jakob Homan
Apache Airflow, Apache Kafka, Apache Hadoop
Chad Dombrova
Apache Beam
Myrle Krantz
Apache Software Foundation - Diversity and Inclusion committee + board
Katia Rojas
Apache Software Foundation Outreachy Program
Greg Hesp
assistant-relay
Beka Westberg
Blockly
Siebrand Mazeland
Blockly Games
Dave Mielke
BRLTTY
Vijay Hiremath
Chromium; platform/ec
Daniel Stenberg
curl / libcurl
Simon Binder
Dart build system
Aloďs Deniel
device_preview
Fatima Sarah Khalid
Drupal
Gregory Popovitch
Filament
Amr Yousef
Flutter
Remi Rousselet
Flutter
Pooja Bhaumik
Flutter
Elijah Newren
Git
Roger Peppe
Go
Oleksandr Porunov
JanusGraph
Tim Bannister
Kubernetes
June Yi
Kubernetes
Karen Bradshaw
Kubernetes
James Le Cuirot
leptonica
Stefan Weil
leptonica
Egor Pugin
leptonica
Bert Frees
LibLouis
Christian Egli
LibLouis
Richard Hughes
Linux Vendor Firmware Service (LVFS)
James (purpleidea)
mgmt
Mike Ryan
NgRx
Stefano Bonicatti
osquery
Alyssa Rosenzweig
panfrost
Carol Willing
Project Jupyter
Mariatta Wijaya
Python programming language
Alexander Neumann
restic
Nicholas Jamieson
rxjs (core member), rxjs-tslint-rules, rxjs-etc, ts-action
Kate Temkin
Several, mostly educational (see in Reasons)
Alyssa Ross
SpectrumOS / Nix
Rosalind Benoit
Spinnaker
Brian Le
Spinnaker
Vincent Demeester
Tekton
Chmouel Boudjnah
Tekton
Andrea Frittoli
Tekton
Simon Kaegi
Tekton
Cameron Shorter
The Good Docs Project
Ando Saabas
TreeInterpreter
Daz Wilkin
Trillian, Prometheus Exporter for GCP, KeyTransparency , OpenCensus
Gerrit Birkeland
typedoc
Wilson Snyder
Verilator
Thomas Oster
VisiCut
Koen Kanters
zigbee2mqtt
Jia Li
Zone.js
Congratulations to our winners! We look forward to your continued support and contributions to open source!

By Maria Tabak, Google Open Source