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Join a community of users and contributors focused on Fedora Workstation.

Fedora Workstation is created by a team in the Fedora Project community called the Workstation Working Group. It is comprised of official members who have decision-making powers, as well as other contributors. Learn more about this group and how you can get involved on the Workstation Working Group website.

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The Fedora Workstation tag on Fedora's Discourse-based discussion forum is a great place to connect with other Fedora Workstation users and contributors.

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You can chat with the Fedora Workstation Working Group via either Matrix or IRC: #workstation:fedoraproject.org on Matrix or #fedora-workstation on irc.libera.chat.

Ways to get involved

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You can view, file, and discuss Fedora Workstation issues on the Fedora Workstation issue tracker.

Attend a meeting

Workstation Working Group meetings are open to all current and potential contributors at **** UTC in **** (see fedocal→workstation for updates).

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Fedora has events throughout the year that you can attend, typically in-person or virtually, to learn more about Fedora Workstation as well as meet other users and contributors.

The Annual Fedora Project Conference

Flock is the Fedora Project's annual multi-day in-person conference focused on our contributors. It typically alternates between European and North American locations. The conference provides a venue for face-to-face meetings and conversations. It is also a place to celebrate our community.

Flock typically takes place every August.

The Virtual Fedora Project Conference

Nest is our at-home, virtual Flock that has been running since the global outbreak of COVID-19. It takes place over 3 days and includes talks, workshops, hackfests, and social events.

Worldwide & Local Fedora Meetups

Hatch is a series of small-scale, in-person global meetups organized in the weeks preceding the Flock / Nest conference enabling Fedorans local to each other to meet.

Fedora Release Parties

Twice a year, in coordination with the release of each new version of Fedora Linux, we hold global virtual release parties. These are typically a 1.5 day "mini-conference" with talks and social events.

Fedora Magazine is a website that hosts promotional articles and short guides contributed from the community about free/libre and open-source software that runs on or works with the Fedora Linux operating system.

The Community Blog provides a single source for members of the community to share important news, updates, and information about Fedora with others in the Project community.