| hm… sorry it came off that way. :( fwiw, the amount of technical things i've learned from working on bootstrap is not proportional to the amount of work i've put into this project… at all. But, i never expected it to be, and that's totally fine. Have I learned any technical things? lol sure, of course! Funnily, the accessibility thing you linked to wasn't really something I learned building bootstrap… the presentation was all about how accessibility is too hard to really learn… and you need to become a specialist, which is sad times. Paul Irish wrote a great post about it a while back: http://paulirish.com/2012/accessibility-and-developers/ maybe i learned that i knew nothing, but that was about it :P My friend Dustin (who created this writing topic on medium) asked me to write about the single most important thing i learned from working on bootstrap. And for me, that single thing was that I love working with people and hate working alone. It took me a while to realize that what was bumming me out the most about running bootstrap (and other projects) was that as they became more successful, there was more of an expectation that i would be working on them all the time (which meant the expectation that i would be working on them independently/alone all the time). That's ok from time to time, but isn't why I get excited about free software and ultimately i became pretty depressed/negative about the whole thing. I'm just now starting to identify what makes we want to continue to dedicate all my free time to a project like bootstrap. And right now, the main motivation is to spend time creating stuff with my favorite people. I can assure you – it's definitely not to learn more about css/js !! :) |
i really like what you've written here though, makes it a lot more clear. have you considered adding some pieces of this comment to the article?