 Okay. All right. So welcome to the last session of our open source design dev room. And as you might have heard already throughout the day or downstairs at our booth, we have this open source design job board. So you can post a job if you have an open source project and you need a logo or a flyer or anything designed also like whatever hardware design for your open hardware project you can post the job there. And it will get you to this simple form where you put the details in, how to contact you, what's the project about. And the idea of this session is to make that in person. So you get three minutes to present your project, one minute to, or I mean, whatever, however you want to use them. But the idea is one minute, quickly describe your project. One minute, quickly say where you need design help specifically and one minute how to contact you or anything else that people want to know or something. It will be timed so that we don't go over the limit unnecessarily. In general, how many people are interested in pitching their project? Okay, cool. So we have a reasonable amount of people and maybe some of you who are not quite sure yet, you can just come and also present your project. It's no big deal, don't worry, and maybe you'll get a designer out of it. So the only thing that the only requirement or whatever is that afterwards, after you presented it here, we would love you to post the job actually also on the website. So that people, not necessarily if you find someone here, you can also just post it there and then you might find someone through there. So great, so let's actually start. And the idea is because we don't want to disconnect and connect the laptop all the time, you just show the project website. And we just do it via that, okay? So do we just want to start with you because you already basically preloaded this thing and I'm gonna get the timer ready. Okay, so say start whenever you want to start. Sure. Okay, do you have a microphone? Okay, perfect. Yeah, all right. Hello. Hey guys, my name is Ryan Sypes. I'm community manager for Thunderbird. This is Phil, he's Philip. He's the chair of the council. And I'm sure a lot of you probably have heard of Thunderbird before. We're the email client that is hashtag freeing the inbox. And we used to be a part of Mozilla and now we're run completely by the community. And we have a really big project that has a look that's kind of a legacy of a time pass. And so we'd like to show that to you guys. And then hopefully some of you will come and contribute to the project. Because the best way to tell a designer that you can kind of help on something is to show how horrible it might be. So this is what you see when you start up Thunderbird. You've got, we recently moved to like square tabs to kind of follow along with what Firefox is doing with Photon. And as you can see there's a calendar on the right hand side. But right now it just says, when you start up, do you want to set up an account? And it gives you the options for the different account types that you can set up. This is the email screen of Thunderbird. And this is where you would view your email. The bottom part is the preview. Although it's not really showing much of anything here. This is where you could see a message. See the content of the email that you're looking at. This is just a draft message that Philip, the screen shot it here. This is the calendar. It's pretty basic calendar up there. Up at the top there you see it lists out the events in a list view and then lays them out on this. This is the monthly view of the calendar. We also have day, week, etc. Here's tasks. You don't have a lot of time to talk about this, but it's pretty straightforward. You click the task when you're done with it. You can add tasks at the bottom. And then we also have chat functionality. It does IRC matrix and Twitter. And I don't know what else you can add there. And then this is a theme that the company Monorail did for us. It's imagining of what Firefox could look like. We've tried to move there as quickly as we can, but of course it's a community effort. And you can get involved by, well, there's our Twitter handle. And I'm gonna leave some cards. So if you're interested in contributing, I'd love to help you get involved and provide you with whatever you need to do that. So I'm gonna leave my cards up here. Okay, I've got two seconds left. I've put them on Thunderbird. Okay, so I think on Thunderbird, the great thing is that it's a project that reaches over 25 million users. And it gives you good opportunity to show your work to the world. Thank you so much. Yeah, so also please post it on the job board. And yeah, it's great to have you in the community. And please also join our forum. And yeah, cool. So who wants to go next? You can just click it to your- Yeah, open the project website and then- I would just, you can post me it, and, no, I'll be, and I will just signal. We'll just signal two minutes and one minute, okay? Okay. Okay, go. So, Kilwix is the name of the project. I'm a developer that kind of contributes. And it's founded by a French guy who now lives in Switzerland. There are contributors from the US and the UK and France and Germany, wherever. The general premise is take Wikipedia with you. So in remote parts of Africa, for example, they don't have a very good internet connection. Browsing Wikipedia in whatever language is difficult. So, Kilwix as an app, there's an Android app, an iOS app, native apps, and a web viewer. The Android app is used by about 50,000 users monthly. And then there are lots of other sub kind of content specific apps as well. It's not just Wikipedia. The app lets you view physics simulations and stack exchange posts and YouTube and Khan Academy. There are lots of different bits of content in there. The app currently has no, or the project in general currently has very few designers involved. In fact, zero designers to my knowledge. So it's kind of been all the UIs are built by developers. The native apps are currently about to start being rewritten. So there's a good chance to come in for a green field project, a new project. But also the Android projects, there are lots of easy pickings for someone who knows what they're doing to come in and really take ownership of the design of these different apps. So there's a bit of everything, bit of Android design, bit of iOS design, bit of web design and a bit of native app design. There's also designing the content because stuff that's not Wikipedia specific can also be kind of munged, designed into a nice easy to browse content. So there's kind of a lot of scope for design. If you want to try one thing and then move on to something else, that's fine within the project. So, mostly Wikipedia is used in places with very poor internet connection. I personally have been involved in sending gigabytes and gigabytes, many, many hundreds of SD cards to places like rural Africa and India and various places that is basically hard to get an internet connection. So, if you want to be involved in that, you can contact me or go to Kiwix.org and you can find us all on GitHub. But I'll be around afterwards, so you can come find me. Thank you. Okay, who's next? Okay, so I didn't plan to pitch here and I'm very tired, so it could be messy. So, Arbor is a social file sharing application that I want to make to help people exchange files, typically. Hurry the pictures with your family, friends, or whatever. So, the goal is to get real kind of Facebook, Google, Drive, Dropbox and all of that. So, yeah, to have an alternative to that. So, yeah, but the thing is, I'm only one person on this project and I would be very happy to have a designer to help me. So, it's kind of working already, so and it's not really terrible, but, yeah, there's still a lot of things that need to be designed and to be improved. So, yeah, so if you want to contact me, you can reach me on GitHub or the, so to go to the GitHub page, you just write A-B-O. It's the name of the project, then you end up on the GitHub page. I'm designing the website right now, but it's not done, so it would be there sometimes. Thank you, shorter presentation, they'll always also encourage, so. You next? Just take it in your hand also. Okay, Seamly is the rebranded name of the Valentina project and we're developing a pattern share for fashion sewing patterns because we're trying to remove the barriers to entry into this unnecessarily secretive and proprietary industry. It's the second biggest industry on the planet. So, there are a lot of people who are interested in this, but not that many people who are designers and not that many developers yet, but we do have a lot of interest. So, I'm here at FOSDA, I'm trying to gain additional contributors. This particular pattern share is obviously beta. No designers were involved with this, but the person who developed this is the database developer. So, what we want to do is the idea was to have something that was similar to the music players that Nate Willis talked about earlier today. And when he mentioned that it's actually a music player, I went, that's right, it really clicks. So, I'm looking for a designer who can help us implement that workflow where a person, a designer, will use our desktop app and upload it to the cloud with all the meta files required, the tech pack, the images, the tags, and then easily scroll through the images and search data to find what they need. So, if you have any interest in working on this project, please let me know. I think you can contact, it's not here, but you can contact us at hello at Seamly.net. We actually have time for a question, so, yeah, go ahead. Are you coming from this industry, I mean, your background is? My background, I sewed on my clothes to high school. I'm not trained in fashion design. My background is network security. I was manager for NASA's budget and time network for years. When I retired, I had children to raise, my husband and I had blended families. Anyway, I chose this to keep my brain together, to keep my hand in some sort of time. It just grew, we have several thousand beta users around the world and we're translated into over 30 languages and it seems like it's going to really take off. We've gotten lots of interest, so we just need designers to work really great and the workflow smooth. Okay, that was nice, yep. And remember everyone, put it on open source, design.net slash jobs, just a minute there. Smaller. Hi, I'm Bob, this is Gasodoto. I had a lighted talk yesterday, so you can find probably a record on the Fausten website about the detail of the application. But this is just an accounting application for ethical purchasing group or to ease the local economy to purchase goods from a local producer and sustain local economy in different places. It is a purchasing model quite popular in Italy. I'm trying to spread it in other countries. This is a website, you can find here a demo. The application has been rewrote in the last two years. And the whole graphic is just plain bootstrap and I'm absolutely bad at choosing colors. The logo is quite ugly. So if you want to participate, you can get a look to the demo, just to get an idea of the application. In particular here, it is missing a local selector here. So the full language is Italian. You can find a translation in English and German in the configuration. And you can find me, Opla. Here, of course, you can find the contents in the gas.dot.net. Or you can find it on GitHub, and that's all. Thank you. In the back, no? So you can, yeah, if you need designers, you can put your project. If it's a little bit. One nice designer will do it, but. Also, yeah, also if you just need one designer, yeah? And this will show you why. Here, do you have the mic? Yeah. I was thinking of you, if you had two minutes. Yeah, okay. I'm not sure if any one of you is familiar with skydiving, parachuting. I am, I jumped out of an airplane about 300 times. The problem in skydiving the last 20 years is that parachutes are getting smaller, and skydivers are choosing smaller canopies, and landing very fast. That is dangerous, that kills people. So the parachute is okay, the material is fine, and then the pilot makes a mistake and kills himself because the canopy is too small. So in the Netherlands, there are now rules. What kind of experience you need to jump with a specific canopy, specific parachute? And those rules are rather complicated. So I built this website over two years ago, where you can select your experience level. And let's say I'm a beginner. That sets the total number of jumps to five. Jumps in the last year to five. And the exit weight to 85 kilograms. And then shows here the green, the parachutes I can jump because of my experience. When I gain experience, let's say I'm an expert. Let's say I have done 1,200 jumps of its 200 in the last year. Then I can jump all these kinds of canopies. So it's a rather simple app. It's already working. I'm rebuilding it currently. This is AngularJS, and I'm rebuilding it to be in React. So there is all kinds of space to change the layout and change the system. One of the main things I would like to change is that you can app or send a specific parachute to a friend to recommend it. Currently, if you select the parachute, it's expanded here, and it's not shown in the URL. What I would like to do is have a specific page for each parachute so you can send it through to a friend. Because actually, this is also a database of all parachutes that exist in the world. You can search, for example, for this parachute, and it shows it in a pop-up. And that should be a page in the new site, I think. And there's many more things to improve, both in just the design and the interaction. So if anybody would like to have a simple design project, I think it's rather simple. It can be explained in these three minutes. Be my guest. My name is Robert Wettbar. If you go to this site, you can find my details. Then you have to know the site. So you have to write down this URL. It's skydive-compatros. That's the Dutch name of the regulations. And there is in the menu information with my email address. Thank you. So this is a really cool example, actually, where good design can save lives, right? Or where this app can actually save lives. So yeah. Cool. OK. Anyone else? We have how many minutes do we have left, actually? Yeah, nine minutes. So like two more, maybe three. Yeah. You don't need your laptop. We're not going to unplug anything. So just open the website of the project. Oh, it's local. Oh, we can try. We can try. If you're the only person who wants to. Or do you also want to pitch? OK, then you come first before we unplug and then. I didn't prepare anything. No worries. I think no one did, so. And I have to. I have a very unsexy project, actually. It's about the mic. Sorry. Yeah, just take both. And I will signal you a few minutes. OK, I have a very unsexy project. It's an identity and access management project. And people usually hate to use it and hate to maintain data they're in. And so there might be some chance to make some people's life a little bit nicer. And OK, it's starting even from the web page. You can see it's really bad design and I'm bad at choosing colors. But you can also look into an online demo. Oh, OK, no, a bit into that interface. And you see it's looking like the 90s. But you can here click into the live demo server. You can even screw it up completely, no problem. I will restore it. So yeah, I need help because people find this ugly and they're right. But it's plain HTML because it's supposed to still work with console browsers. So I would need some help, especially for the cascaded style sheets. So that's it. Thank you. Oh, OK. At the website, I mean. So they do it all at the same time? Yeah, yeah. Oh, how? Yeah, there. So it's ie-deer.com. OK, thank you. Thank you. OK, so yeah, you were the last one or? I mean, maybe we have time for two. Do you also want to talk online with the? Oh, OK, OK. So that's the last project. We'll try to unplug this. Do you have a mini display for it or? Yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah. Do you want to mirror it or something? The display settings? Well, I think you need to mirror it because it's a separate good of the display setting. OK, good for you. And the signer and thing just for display. You just want to mirror it. Perfect. Yeah, thank you. And then this. OK. Hello, guys. We are freestyling, like some of you. We just want to say thank you for the open design because I was here first time last year and this was actually the class that made me feel home. And it's nice to return back here. This is Eric. We are students at Swedish IT school. We're studying application development for iOS and Android. We were sitting in the classroom after the class hours and just playing together and doing some homeworks. And we thought that why can't this school have an open source community? Because we thought that it can be quite hard to get into open sourcing. Just we are GitHub that is so big and scary. So we wanted to have it local. What we are actually now doing with the small first version of the web page, it can be found on can I get it to fit the screen anyway? The resolution is the screen presenter resolution. OK. What do you command line it? The project is actually up the first version of it on Coffee Break with the name Coffee Break on my account. And actually, we're going to present this to the school next week. And what we like to do is to make the project. Now at the moment, it looks like our school. But we want to look more friendly. So it's easier to get involved and not to look like material design, more friendly. And we will put price also to the logo and the color scheme. So of course, the hardest parts, logo, colors, and hero banner, we are ready to pay for also a bit for it. But what we also offer is to jump on to similar projects because we think that we should take these open source projects. If you have a job place where you want to create some kind of open source things or a school, and let us together have more ideas what these kind of platforms should have to get the open source ideas and movement going. Oh, yeah. What are the contacts? Let me just write it here. Or on the GitHub, maybe. I mean, is your email there? In your GitHub profile? Good question. There is a page you can find my email. I'm going to see coolsport.sv. OK, thank you guys. Cool. So that was it, basically, for our open source design dev room this year. I want to help you. Yeah, if you want to help clean, much appreciate it. I'll just take away if you see some trash out. Yeah, take some trash out and stuff. And if you want some stickers, we actually ran out of stickers here. But maybe there's some down at the booth. And yeah, and I would like to give a special thanks to Victoria, who organized the room this year. So see you next year, or at a different open source conference near you, I guess. Thank you guys. Thank you.