 LibreOffice is used by millions of people around the world, but it's also developed by a worldwide community with hundreds of people working on source code, user interface design, documentation and translations. Many LibreOffice developers work full-time on the software, but many others work in their spare time providing contributions because they love free and open-source software. Although LibreOffice is a big project, it's friendly and open to everyone. We have many channels of communication including mailing lists, IRC channels and regular team calls. We try to make every new contributor feel welcome. My name is Ashod Nakashian and I'm a contributor to LibreOffice. I would say the community is very welcoming, very helpful. I got assistance immediately and they set me up, helped me with getting the patch reviewed and committed as soon as possible. So the experience was actually very much empowering. I wanted to go for the next one, which I did. To get new contributors familiar with LibreOffice, we have a specialised task called Easy Hacks and we work with students from the Google Summer of Code to introduce them to the project. I'm a Google Summer of Code student from India and I've been involved since the start of this year. It was an awesome experience because there are so many great guys who mentor us into the organisation, help us through the bugs, the easy hacks and all are designed to bring new people into the organisation and that's what's great. LibreOffice is backed by the Document Foundation, a non-profit entity. It employs a small team that works on infrastructure, documentation, QA and marketing and is built upon statutes which govern the project guaranteeing that LibreOffice will always belong to the community. Every year LibreOffice developers and supporters get together for a conference where they share ideas, demonstrate new features and talk about the future of the software. If you're a user of LibreOffice but want to get involved in the project, you're welcome to join. I'm Yona, I'm from Albania. I'm a student at the University of Tirana there. I studied for business informatics. Being just a user of LibreOffice, I thought why not to be also part of the community and to contribute there. So that's why I'm also contributing to LibreOffice and I'm really glad that I had the opportunity to be here at the conference so I can know more people that are part of it and can help me better to get involved with the community. So get involved, go to tdf.io slash join us and choose which team or project you want to help. We really appreciate your contributions and above all we hope you have fun.