I was thrilled to be part of a successful Debian bug squashing party
organized by MIT's Student Information Processing Board on December
13th. Greg Price, who helped organize the event, did a wonderful
write up which he sent to the debian-devel email list.
I though it was worth mentioning the BSP now because I think it's a
wonderful model that I'd love to see replicated in Debian and beyond.
The event was initiated, organized, run, and executed by people with
little or no direct experience with the project. While the organizers
went out of their way to recruit several Debian developers and other
experts to the party, these experts' role was more in answering
questions and helping others. The the majority of the participants --
around 30 of them in total -- had no previous experience doing Debian
development.
While the 11 bugs closed or dealt with are the most visible outcome, I'm
not sure that it is the most important. The event acted as an important
learning experience for everyone involved and, perhaps most centrally,
an important first step for most participants from using free software
to giving back and participating in the community.
You don't need experience, connections, or a @project.org email address
to organize a party like this for Debian or your own free software
project. All you really need is a few people, some technical knowledge,
an Internet connection, and the desire to make it happen.
Other things can help, of course. In particular, the SIPB folks have
packaged up some scripts they used to select bugs to work on and put
them online.