The First Ever Entirely Volunteer Run Open Source Conference is a Huge Succes
When the open source convention OSCON decided to move from Portland, Oregon to San Jose last year, the open source citizens of Portland set about developing their own "conference for developers working with open source technologies and for people interested in learning the open source way". And since Portland is a hub of the open source community, an army of volunteers and organizers were able to put together its own three day conference called Open Source Bridge. With its focus on open source citizenship, its innovative track structure for sessions, an all-night hacker's lounge and peer-produced conference software, Open Source Bridge was not only a success, but plans are already underway for next year's conference.
Open Source Citizenship
When Open Source Bridge co-founder Audrey Eschright began to think about organizing this conference, she first took a look at open source citizenship:
"We're planning a conference that will connect developers across projects, across languages, across backgrounds to learn from each other. We want people to experience something beyond "how to use tool X" or "why databases keel over when you do Y" (even though those topics are important, making up our tools and trade, and will be a central part of the conference content). We'd like to share what open source means to us, what it offers, where we struggle, and why we do this day in and day out, even when we're not paid for it.
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