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* Be an effective bridge between the external volunteer contributor base and the contributor community inside Red Hat, such as RHEL engineers.
* Be an effective bridge between the external volunteer contributor base and the contributor community inside Red Hat, such as RHEL engineers.
* Lower contributor barriers to the absolute minimum, and encourage others to get involved in FOSS through Fedora.
* Lower contributor barriers to the absolute minimum, and encourage others to get involved in FOSS through Fedora.
== Education Background ==
Jared graduated in 2001 from Utah State University with a degree in Computer Engineering.
His fondest memory of his USU education involves a course taught by [http://digital.cs.usu.edu/~allan/ Professor Stephen J. Allan]:
"The class was something like "Unix Basics" or something boring like that, but the teacher made the assignments interesting, by forcing you to work with others in the class to solve a problem. A typical assignment might go something like this: 'Joe, you write an awk script to take this file I give you and transform it to look like this -- Susie, you take that, and use grep and sed to do this to it, Jared -- you take that and write a Perl script to do this...' and so on. So not only did we learn the tools, we had to communicate our expectations and assumptions with the other members of our team."

Revision as of 15:56, 23 July 2011

Jared Smith
Jared Smith
Fedora Information
FAS name: jsmith
Fedora email: jsmith@fedoraproject.org
IRC nick: jsmith
IRC channels: #fedora-docs, #asterisk-doc, #asterisk-dev, #asterisk-bugs (and others)
Fedorapeople page: https://jsmith.fedorapeople.org
Badges (183)
Speak Up! Junior Editor Flock 2013 Attendee Involvement Tanked! Crypto Panda You can call me "Patches" (SCM I) If you build it... (Koji Success I) Bona Fide You can call me "Patches" (SCM II) If you build it... (Koji Success II) Junior Badger (Badger I) Mugshot Ambassador FUDCon Cusco Nuancier Is this thing on? (Updates-Testing II) Is this thing on? (Updates-Testing I) Flock 2013 Speaker Embryo Like a Rock (Updates-Stable I) Like a Rock (Updates-Stable II) In Search of the Bull (Tester I) Baby Badger Bloggin' it! (Planet III) Bloggin' it! (Planet I) Bloggin' it! (Planet II) Tagger (Tagger II) Senior Tagger (Tagger III) Junior Tagger (Tagger I) Tadpole Tadpole with Legs Egg White Hat Apex Take this and call me in the morning Secretary General Novice (Wordsmith I) Sensei Discovery of the Footprints (Tester II) No Longer a Ronin Vacation Associate Editor Helping Hand The Blessing of the FPL Let Me Introduce Myself White Rabbit Proven Packager Froglet Keepin Fedora Beautiful (F21) Flock 2014 Speaker If you build it... (Koji Success III) Flock 2014 Attendee What goes around comes around (Karma I) Senior Badger (Badger II) Flock Paparazzi Science (Kernel Tester I) Party Pirate Dancing with Toshio Nuancier 21 Readiness Def Keepin Fedora Beautiful (F21) What goes up... (Koji Failure I) Perceiving the Bull (Tester III) Shellshocked Fedora Docs FAD 2014 You can call me "Patches" (SCM III) What goes around comes around (Karma II) Corporate Drone Package Tagger (Package Tagger II) What goes up... (Koji Failure II) FUDCon Managua Flock 2015 Attendee The Panda Is In FUDCon Pune 2015 Attendee FUDCon Pune 2015 Speaker Senior Package Tagger (Package Tagger III) Junior Package Tagger (Package Tagger I) Associate Badger (Badger 1.5) DevConf 2015 Attendee Nuancier (F22) OSCON 2015 Attendee Macaron (Cookie I) Science (Kernel Tester II) Flock 2015 Speaker Origin Telegraphist (Upstream Release Monitoring I) Delivery Keepin Fedora Beautiful (F23) Chocolate Chip (Cookie II) Is this thing on? (Updates-Testing III) Nom Nom Nom If you build it... (Koji Success IV) You can call me "Patches" (SCM IV) Corporate Shill FUDCon Cordoba 2015 Speaker FUDCon Cordoba 2015 Attendee Def Keepin Fedora Beautiful (F23) Building the Outer Ring (Copr Build I) Nuancier F23 Master Badger (Badger III) Building the Outer Ring (Copr Build II) Partners in Crime Building the Outer Ring (Copr Build III) Building the Outer Ring (Copr Build IV) What goes up... (Koji Failure III) Building the Outer Ring (Copr Build V) Building the Outer Ring (Copr Build VI) Black and White (Cookie III) Building the Outer Ring (Copr Build VII) Like a Rock (Updates-Stable III) Top 100 The Last Argument of Kings Senior Editor What goes up... (Koji Failure IV) Master Editor Top 25 Fedora 24 Change Accepted Badge Muse (Badge Ideas I) Top 500 Patches (SCM V) Krakow Brews! Nuancier F24 Flock 2016 Attendee All your $arch are belong to us (Koji Success V) The cat came back... Nuancier F25 Community Messenger I Nuancier F26 Security Team Chief Editor Steampunk Arcade Hindenburg (Koji Failure V) Adult Frog Binary Star Meeting of the Minds Fedora Mindshare FAD 2018 F28 i18n Test Day Participant Flock 2017 Attendee Pizzelle (Cookie IV) Fedora Podcast Interviewee Fedora Docs FAD 2018 Flock 2018 Attendee I Voted: Fedora 29 It's a Cake Thing Rollercoaster Restaurant Catching the Bull (Tester IV) Badge Junkie (Badger IV) Parselmouth I You’re on a boat! Long Life to Pagure (Pagure I) Long Life to Pagure (Pagure II) Long Life to Pagure (Pagure III) Fedora Advocate Flock 2019 Attendee I Voted: Fedora 31 Long Life to Pagure (Pagure VI) I Voted: Fedora 30 Long Life to Pagure (Pagure V) Long Life to Pagure (Pagure IV) I Voted: Fedora 32 F32 i18n Test Day Participant I Voted: Fedora 33 nest-attendee-2020 Lets have a party Fedora 33 I Voted: Fedora 34 Magazine Editor DevConf.cz 2021 Attendee Lets have a party Fedora 34 Community Survey Taker I IoT Working Group Member Nest Attendee 2021 I Voted: Fedora 36 Nest with Fedora 2022 Attendee Museum Visitor I Voted: Fedora 35 Community Survey Taker 2022 I voted: Fedora 37 Creative Freedom Summit 2023 Attendee Community Survey Taker 2023 Let's have an anniversary party (Fedora 39) I voted: Fedora 39 I voted: Fedora 38
 

My name is Jared Smith. I'm a big Linux geek. I enjoy systems administration, relational databases, web programming, and VoIP. I eat too many donuts, and don't blog as regularly as I should. I've managed small systems and large-scale networks (over 6500 servers and 800 network devices). As a college freshman, I once stuffed 26 jumbo marshmallows in my mouth to win a contest. Oh, and I wrote a book for O'Reilly on Asterisk and the future of telephony. For all the nitty gritty details, see http://www.jaredsmith.net/about/.

Contact

Activities within Fedora

  • I work for Red Hat as the Fedora Project Leader.
  • I help out with the Fedora Docs project, and generally make a nuisance of myself. I have a lot of experiece with DocBook publication toolchains, such as Publican.
  • I've also helped out on the Fedora Infrastructure team, mostly around the Fedora Talk server. (I have *lots and lots* of experience with Asterisk and voice over IP.)
  • I do my best to report bugs when I find them, and work with those responsible to ensure the problems get solved.

Goals as the Fedora Project Leader

  • Oversee the entire Fedora Project -- if it's in Fedora, ultimately I'm accountable for it.
  • Act as a catalyst within the community to improve communications and encourage excellent behavior
  • Work with the Fedora Program Manager John Poelstra, Fedora Engineering Manager Tom "Spot" Callaway, and the Community Architecture team to make sure that Fedora is making constant, substantial progress in its mission to advance free and open source software.
  • Chair the Fedora Project Board, and ensure that the Board is effectively advising and guiding the Fedora Project where needed.
  • Be an effective bridge between the external volunteer contributor base and the contributor community inside Red Hat, such as RHEL engineers.
  • Lower contributor barriers to the absolute minimum, and encourage others to get involved in FOSS through Fedora.

Education Background

Jared graduated in 2001 from Utah State University with a degree in Computer Engineering.

His fondest memory of his USU education involves a course taught by Professor Stephen J. Allan:

"The class was something like "Unix Basics" or something boring like that, but the teacher made the assignments interesting, by forcing you to work with others in the class to solve a problem. A typical assignment might go something like this: 'Joe, you write an awk script to take this file I give you and transform it to look like this -- Susie, you take that, and use grep and sed to do this to it, Jared -- you take that and write a Perl script to do this...' and so on. So not only did we learn the tools, we had to communicate our expectations and assumptions with the other members of our team."