At this year's Akademy, in the back of the bus on the way to the day trip, several BugSquad members attended a spontaneous BoF meeting to discuss where we currently are and where we are going.
During the last year we have had many active members who worked hard to bring order to our bugtracker. Often after a period of time, BugSquad members become involved in other parts of KDE - often coding in one of the various parts that need help. Gaining new contributors for KDE is good, but unfortunately BugSquad needs a constant influx of fresh blood to replenish our supply of members.
This is why starting this weekend we'll be reviving our old habit of holding Bug Days. The purpose of a Bug Day is to help developers dig through large piles of bug reports, making it easier for important bugs to be found and get
fixed. There are two flavors of Bug Day: one consists of investigating current bug reports to see if they can still be reproduced (so called triage) and the other tries to find new bugs in an application (krush). The scope of investigation is limited to one single KDE application per Bug Day, sometimes even only a specific part of an application.
We're happy to announce that the target for our first Bug Day this year will be
Dolphin. Starting this Sunday 1st of August around 10:00 AM everyone is invited
to gather in our IRC channel #kde-bugs on FreeNode. The only thing needed to
take part is an internet connection and a recent version of the KDE Software Compilation
(the newer the better, if you need help equipping your system, be sure to stop by early).
Senior members of BugSquad will be around to help newcomers get started.
For information and coordination we will be using a page on the KDE Techbase
wiki: http://techbase.kde.org/Contribute/Bugsquad/BugDays/DolphinDay1.