![]() What’s next for the foundation?įrom the foundation’s side, there are a million ideas on how this might be done, and now there’s a million dollars to make it happen. Together, The Rails Foundation and The Rails Core Team will work to ensure that our ecosystem stays healthy, continues to improve, and becomes even more attractive to newcomers going forward. The Rails Core Team will continue to be fully responsible for the technical evolution of the framework, managing code contributions, and shepherding new releases. The Rails Foundation has secured a long-term exclusive license to all the Ruby on Rails trademarks, and will be responsible for the maintenance and evolution of the website, social media channels, and all other outlets that may serve to further its mission. The board’s first task will be to hire a full-time executive director who will run the daily operations of this new non-profit 501(c)6 foundation, and work with freelancers and contributors to fulfill the foundation’s mission. The founding core members are each represented on the foundation’s board, which is then chaired by the creator of Ruby on Rails, David Heinemeier Hansson. These corporate members have together generously endowed the foundation with $1,000,000 USD in seed funding to make a real difference on all the aforementioned areas of improvement. In alphabetical order, the eight founding core members of The Rails Foundation are: Cookpad, Doximity, Fleetio, GitHub, Intercom, Procore, Shopify, and 37signals. The Rails Foundation has been formed to address all of these points and more. It’s not nearly easy enough for a developer interested in learning Rails to find their way through decades of often outdated books, blog posts, and screencasts, connect with others learning at the same time, make the case to coworkers or bosses why Rails is the right choice, or meet up with fellow practitioners at events solely dedicated to Rails. The reason for that is largely a question of documentation, education, marketing, and events. Right now, that case isn’t being made as well as it could be. There have never been more options for new web developers than there are today, and if we want to continue to celebrate the success of Rails in another two decades from now, we need to make the best case possible for why someone should come join us. The code we all depend on is in great condition and under great care.īut after all these years, it’s also become clear that building a strong ecosystem depends on more than just great code. The Rails Core Team, together with thousands of contributors, have steered us forward with fixes, enhancements, and improvements in release after release. On the technical side, we’ve also never stood stronger than we do with Rails 7. It’s been a glorious run, and we’re still going! Companies have gone all the way from HELLO WORLD to IPO using Rails, creating billions of dollars in value along the way. Millions of applications have been built using Rails by hundreds of thousands of happy developers over the years. It’s been over 18 years since Ruby on Rails was first released, and since then, an incredible ecosystem has emerged around it. ![]() It’s been started by some of the most important companies involved with Rails, and will work to ensure a prosperous ecosystem that continues to improve, and becomes even more attractive to newcomers going forward. Its mission is to improve the documentation, education, marketing, and events in our ecosystem to the benefit of all new and existing Rails developers. ![]() Today, we are excited to announce the launch of The Rails Foundation.
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