
As a volunteer contributing to this area, you will have multiple opportunities tolearn, grow, and connect with others while contributing to theopen knowledge movement!
Language communities often lack enough tech-savvy volunteers to address technical challenges for themselves and their communities, particularly in emerging languages. Only a few contributors know how to handle this work, and it can be overwhelming for them to meet all the technical needs of a community. Here is a quote from a Bangladeshi contributor:
"From my experience, I've seen that small Wikimedia communities struggle a lot with dev work or even MediaWiki configuration. My idea was to create a team with that capacity, directly receive requests from different Wikimedia communities, and work as a one-stop solution for light technical support on a rolling basis."

In this field of work, there are several ways you can engage as a volunteer:
Code Contribution: Develop an understanding of internationalization principles, tools, and best practices for creating multilingual software like MediaWiki, which can be adapted to various regions and cultures. Gain hands-on experience with open-source contributions, including making changes, submitting patches, and collaborating with other contributors on platforms like Gerrit and GitHub. If you are looking for technical tasks, check out the unassigned easy tasks invarious language project repositories on Wikimedia Phabricator.

Community Meetings:

Translations: Translate content and make it accessible in various languages.
Language Onboarding: Are you involved in helping your language wiki grow content inWikimedia Incubator and beyond? Check out some resources below:
Outreach: Subscribe to theLanguage and Internationalization newsletter to learn about new feature developments, improvements in various language-related technical projects, support work, and ideas for getting involved in contributing to these projects.
Advocacy: Secure dedicated support from experienced language specialists and developers in the Wikimedia Foundation and community to assist volunteers and advocate for the needs of technical users and contributors from language communities to relevant stakeholders (e.g., WMF Product/Tech teams). Engage in relevant venues such as community events, discussions on tasks in Phabricator, and creating tasks if they don’t exist by filing a bug report onPhabricator and tagging it with LPL Onboarding and Development. SeeHow to report a bug.
Partnerships: Are you part of a language diversity outreach initiative, tools development project, or university program and would like to collaborate with the Wikimedia Foundation’s Language and Onboarding Support area to make them accessible to Wikimedia projects globally (e.g., keyboards and proofing tools)? Get in touch by starting a discussion on the talk pagehere.