I'm curious about the language culture represented. Of the top three TIOBE languages, there are only 6 projects for C and C++, and none at all for Java.
I really like the idea here. Interesting how many of the projects are in .net, I wonder if that's just the authors language or if there really are a disproportionately higher number of .net projects well organized for accepting new contributors.
This is likely a historical thing (the curators have a background in .NET and web development, and have lots of contacts in the .NET OSS space) but not something we want to limit ourselves too.
This is essentially exactly what I've been wanting. I really want to start doing some real world work on open source projects, because I feel they'll be great experience. However the projects I'd love to work on (TOR among others) are just so dense and impenetrable that I don't even know how to figure out how to get started.
We made a similar service for civic tech projects, pulling from a long list of volunteer groups and non-profits. It only shows the "help wanted" labels.
http://www.codeforamerica.org/geeks/civicissues
I was just about to start a project for this! How did you handle Git's API rate limiting? I was going to be lazy and update my listings every minute with a node scheduler.
I hadn't contributed until I found this site a month ago. I looked around in a language I was most comfortable in and then checked out some of the projects. Most of the projects on the list had tags for easy or bite-sized on their issue list.
Just a small idea: add section with projects which offer rewards for contributors. That should cover:
* users who will pay for bugfixing
* some sort of small rewards such as bug contests
* scholarship (Google Summer of Code | etc...)
* non financial rewards such as conference passes