This Week in Ruma

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In addition to the bulleted highlights listed below, major work was done this week to help the community get involved in Ruma development. The Git repository now includes contribution guidelines, as well as a document with a chart detailing all the API endpoints in the Matrix specification and the current status of support for each in Ruma. Each endpoint in the chart links to a tracking issue on GitHub, offering a place for contributors to announce their interest in working on the endpoint and to discuss implementation. A few additional issues were added to the issue tracker to give additional ideas for ways people interested in contributing can help. These issues are listed below in the "contribution opportunities" section.

Lastly, my partner Leah (who works professionally as a technical writer) and I spent most of the weekend working on a new documentation website for Ruma. The site will include Ruma's user guide, as well as a section dedicated to introducing and explaining the concepts of Matrix. With the launch of Vector (see "Matrix at large" below) this week, word about Matrix is going to start to spread faster, and Matrix is in dire need of very clear explanations that are targeted at non-technical users. We are being extremely careful with the content of this Matrix concept documentation, choosing our terminology, analogies, and examples in a way that won't assume too much about the reader's knowledge and won't overload them with buzzwords without explaining what they mean using words and concepts commonly understood by everyone. I'm really excited to launch this new documentation site because I think it's going to be very effective in helping both technical and non-technical people understand what Matrix is, how it works, and why someone would want to use it.

Notable changes to ruma

Notable changes to ruma.dev

New contributors

Contribution opportunities

Matrix at large

Two members of the Matrix team were in San Francisco this week for Decentralized Web Summit. The most exciting announcement was that Vector, a slick Matrix client available as a web app, iOS app, and Android app, is now in open beta! A blog post, Say Hello To Vector! was published alongside the announcement at the conference. You can try Vector by chatting with us in the room for Ruma!

On Wednesday evening, I met the Matrix team and some other Matrix enthusiasts in the area for dinner near the Internet Archive's office. It was great to meet everyone in person. We had some good discussions about Matrix, especially about how to address the risk of spam and abuse in the Matrix network using a reputation system.

New issues opened for the Matrix specification: