Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by cmn32480 on Friday December 11 2015, @09:43PM   Printer-friendly
from the where-the-money-goes dept.

People complain about where Mozilla's money goes... Well...

From The Mozilla Open Source Blog:

We are delighted to announce the first set of awards in the Mozilla Open Source Support program's "Foundational Technology" track, which supports projects that Mozilla uses or relies upon.>

...

The first seven awardees are:

Buildbot: $15,000. Buildbot is a continuous build and integration system which has been immensely valuable to Mozilla over the past few years. Their award will be used to remove the term "slave" from all documentation, APIs and tests, and also to make improvements so Buildbot works better in the Amazon EC2 cloud.

CodeMirror: $20,000. CodeMirror is a powerful source code editor built with Web technologies, used in the Developer Tools and in Mozilla Thimble. Their award will be used to improve support for both right-to-left languages and complex script input.

Discourse: $25,000. Discourse is online discussion forum software, used by several Mozilla communities. Their award will be used to make email a first-class interaction mechanism for Discourse, allowing Discourse instances to replace and improve upon mailing lists.

Read The Docs: $48,000. Read The Docs is a website for building and hosting documentation, used by many of Mozilla's Web projects. Their award will be used to add the ability to generate documentation from code without needing to install it, thereby making it easier to build the documentation for complex projects.

Mercurial: $75,000. Mercurial is a distributed source code management system, used heavily by Mozilla for core repositories such as mozilla-central. Their award will be used to implement better support for 'blame' (showing who last changed some code) and a better web UI.

Django: $150,000. Django is a popular server-side Web development framework, used in many Mozilla websites. Their award will be used to make Django suitable to be a back end for Web apps which use WebSockets.

Bro: $200,000. Bro is network monitoring software, which is at the heart of Mozilla's intrusion detection system for our network. Their award will be used to build the Comprehensive Bro Archive Network, a public repository of modules and plugins for Bro.


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by vux984 on Sunday December 13 2015, @01:44AM

    by vux984 (5045) on Sunday December 13 2015, @01:44AM (#275642)

    Never mind that "Bro culture" is not a derogatory term, its self-applied.

    I didn't say "derogatory"; I said "offensive". The rest of your post falls apart as a result.

    To elaborate on the difference here, imagine a software project called "KKK dashboard" a color correction tool for photos and video. KKK members self apply the label... so its not a derogatory term and I'm sure nobody will be offended.

    For what its worth, I'm not offended by "Bro" software. And I'm not offended by the word slave in buildbot either. I think taking offense to either is ridiculous. But if I were the sort of SJW who was offended by the word slave in buildbot, I expect I'd be equally upset by "Bro" software; so its eyebrow raising that whoever at Mozilla thought slave had to be purged from buildbot didn't bat an eye at giving 200k to "Bro".

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2