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Welcome to the LiteFarm teamcommunity! This article serves as an introduction for incoming coop students and would-be contributors and incoming staff and co-ops. We’re so excited you’ve decided to join us!

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LiteFarm is a free and open source AgTech app tailor-made to help sustainable farmers make the right decisions about the health of their farm, their livelihood, their community, and the planet. The app is currently being used by more than 24,000 farmers in 96 140 countries and we have ambitious plans to reach more than 10,000 farmers in 2023this year. The core of our philosophy is building software farmers will actually use. This Paradigm rests on 3 core tenants:

  1. Build functionality farmers need and make it accessible through a clean, accessible UI that farmers can pick up and learn (e.g. Simplicity > Robustness)

  2. Help our farmers make a living!

  3. Give farmers the access to expert knowledge and tools they need to run a successful farm!

These approaches serve the dual purposes of incentivizing adoption of sustainable land use practices through the provision of evidence-based decision support, and significantly increasing the amount of data being collected by diversified farming operations (and thus analyzed by researchers) around the globe. LiteFarm is being developed with farmers at the centre of the design process and built from the ground up with accessibility and utility in mind. We are proud of our Mission Statement :

To meet farmers where they are and equip them with the tools they need to make informed and responsible decisions about the health of their farm, their livelihood, their community, and the planet.

… and don’t worry, having little to no knowledge about farming is not a barrier to getting involved in the project. You can read a deep dive https://lite-farm.atlassian.net/l/cp/jzzbCrBd or read more bite-sized descriptions of /wiki/spaces/LITEFARM/pages/1241186307.

Secondarily, LiteFarm was born as a student developed project and we maintain this commitment to promoting ongoing learning. For students and contributors joining us, please know that every single “permanent” member of the core team is willing and interested in helping you to become the best possible professional you can be. We want you to know this a space for learning and experimenting, where making mistakes, asking questions, and saying “I don’t know” is completely fine. As a matter of fact, the greatest “sin” is not getting the help you need. We hope you leave your term, two terms, or ten years with the project confident in:

  • The good work you have contributed to the LiteFarm project

  • Your ability to operate as a team member in a professional, high performing agile environment

  • Your knowledge of the PERN our tech stack

We encourage you to tackle every day as an opportunity to learn something new and stretch yourself. Once again, welcome to the LiteFarm team!

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Core development team

This is a directory of the extended core LiteFarm development team. We’ve outlined working hours, who can help with what, and the best way to get in contact with each person. Please actively reference this if you’ve got a problem and you’re not sure who to talk to.

Name

Role

Approximate Working Hours

Availability (PT)

I can help you…

Preferred Method of Communication

Kevin Cussen

( Lite Farm )Senior Full Stack Engineer

Product Manager

M - Fr: 9AM - 5PM; 8PM - 11PM (as needed)

On paternity leave portions of June - Dec 2023:

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  • Understand why we’re building what we’re building

  • Understand the strategy, direction, and roadmap of LiteFarm

  • Understand the needs of the user

  • Understand details (or missing details) about specific stories

  • Learn more about scrum and teams in general

  • with administrative questions about hours, paychecks, etc.

  • Slack @kcussen for most day-to-day things within the team

  • Tagging Lite Farm on Jira in the comments for any questions about implementation of that story

  • Tagging Lite Farm on Confluence comments for any questions about a guidance document

  • Email @ kcussen@litefarm.org for anything administrative

  • WhatsApp for anything urgent when I’m not responding on Slack

Steve Mattingly (Unlicensed)

Anto Sgarlatta

Tech Lead

M - F:

7AM

5 AM -

3PM

Outside these hours, reach me through Slack.

  • Understand Scrum process details

  • With software design, code quality, and general development issues

  • With SQL, JS, HTML, HTTP, Express, Node, etc.

Slack Steve Mattingly (Unlicensed)

TBD

UX Designer

  • Design guidance

  • UI/UX questions

    2 PM

    • By providing guidance related to our tech stack, tooling and codebase.

    • If you need a code review.

    • Setup your local environment.

    • Figure out any tech related questions.

    • Slack: @Anto Sgarlatta (preferred for everyday stuff)

    • Email: asgarlatta@litefarm.org

    Loic Sans

    Design Lead

    Monday - Friday 2am - 7am > 9.30am - 12.30pm (Fridays to be confirmed on a case by case)

    • Anything Design related

    • Interaction, UX & UI design

    • Styling

    • UX research activities

    • User reasearch

    • Product research

    • Figma questions

    • Slack: @loicsans

    • Email: lsans@litefarm.org

    David Trapp

    Farmer Success

    Coordinator

    Manager

    M - F: 5:00 AM - 2 PM

    Graduate school calendar (days when I will be OOO):

    • 16 to 27/10/2023

    • 11 to 22/03/2024

    • 27/05/2024 to 07/06/2024

    • Support current and prospective LiteFarm users

    • Provide you with a better idea of the overall user experience

    • Assist with testing

    • Slack: David Trapp

    • Email: dtrapp@litefarm.org

    • Whatsapp If I’m not responding on Slack or for anything more urgent.

    Mwayanjana Bolokonya

    Denis Dovganyuk

    Manual Quality Assurance Engineer

    M - F:

    5AM

    5 AM - 1PM

    Reach me outside these hours through slack.

    • Quality assurance activities

    • Slack:

    @Mwaya Bolokonya
    • @Denis Dovganyuk

    • Email :

    mbolokonya@litefarm
    Jag Dhillon

    Sayaka Ono

    Fullstack

    Coop

    Engineer II

    M -

    Fr

    F:

    9AM - 5PM
    • Node, Express, React, TypeScript, MySQL

    • Slack @Jag Dhillon

    • Email: jdhillon@litefarm.org

    Sein Lee

    Fullstack Coop Engineer

    M - Fr: 9AM - 5PM

    • With Node, Express, React, TypeScript, MySQL

    Anant Awasthy

    Fullstack Coop Engineer

    M - Fr: 9AM - 5PM

    • With Node, Express, React and postgresql

    Abdus Shaikh

    Fullstack Coop Engineer

    M - F: 6AM - 2 PM

    • React, Express, Node, PostgreSQL

    • Slack:

    • Email ashaikh@litefarm.org

    Faizah Sayyid

    Fullstack Coop Engineer

    M - F: 6AM - 2PM

    • React, Express, Node

    • Slack: @Faizah Sayyid

    • Email: fsayyid@litefarm.org

    Calum Murray

    Fullstack Coop Engineer

    M - F: 6AM - 2PM

    • React, Node, Express, Typescript, PostgreSQL, and Docker

    • Slack: @Calum Murray

    • Email: cmurray@litefarm.org

    Noa Bridson

    Research Associate

    8AM - 4PM

    • Git workflow

    • Coding tasks (React, CSS etc.)

    • Slack: @Sayaka Ono

    • Email: sono@litefarm.org

    Duncan Brain

    Fullstack Engineer I +
    Community Manager

    M - F: 6 AM - 2PM

    • With anything.. or at least finding the person who can help

    • Slack: @Duncan Brain

    • Email: dbrain@litefarm.org

    Joyce Sato-Reinhold

    Fullstack Engineer I

    M - F: 7:30 AM - 3:30 PM

    • Get oriented to the LiteFarm codebase and set up your local environment

    • Slack: @Joyce Sato-Reinhold

    • Email: jsato@litefarm.org

    Hannah Wittman

    Professor at the Centre for Sustainable Food Systems

    By appointment (via email)

    • Understand how LiteFarm and data from LiteFarm will be used to conduct research

    • hannah.wittman@ubc.ca

    ...

    Core Team

    Image Added

    Extended Team

    ...

    Sprint Flow

    Standard sprint “rituals” (AKA meetings)

    Excerpt
    nameRituals
    Image RemovedImage Added

    Story flow

    Excerpt
    nameSprint flow

    ...

    Here’s the list of tools you’re likely to use, including descriptions, where you can access them, and whom you should speak with to get access (if you don’t have it).

    Tool

    Description

    To Access..

    Administrator(s)

    Slack

    Primary communication tool

    litefarm.slack.com

    • Kevin

    Jira

    Tool for running stories and communicating about stories. Our sprint workflow is described here:

    https://lite-farm.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/LITEFARM/pages/31096833

    JIRA workflow

    https://lite-farm.atlassian.net/secure/RapidBoard.jspa?rapidView=1&projectKey=LF

    • Kevin

    Confluence

    Confluence is where we document overarching guidance documents. Guidance documents describe the “spirit” or “rules” of something within the app without getting into individual screens, endpoints, etc.

    https://lite-farm.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/LITEFARM

    • Kevin

    Github

    Where our code lives

    https://github.com/LiteFarmOrg/LiteFarm

    Steve
    • Kevin

    Git

    Distributed version control system

    https://gist.github.com/derhuerst/1b15ff4652a867391f03

    Steve
    • Kevin

    Figma

    Tool for building and sharing UI

    View-only access will be embedded into Jira stories

    Kevin
    • Caro

    productboard

    Roadmap

    https://portal.productboard.com/litefarm/1-product-portal/tabs/2-planned

    • Kevin

    LucidChart

    Tool for creating flows

    View-only access will be embedded into Jira stories

    • Kevin

    Digital Ocean

    Tool to host the production and integration environments

    https://beta.litefarm.org

    https://app.litefarm.org

    • Kevin

    • Orangel

    Steve
    • Iván

    TeamCity

    Github Actions

    The CI/CD process for LiteFarm

    • Kevin

    Steve
    • Calum

    LastPass

    Tool for sharing credentials

    https://lastpass.com/misc_download2.php

    • Kevin

    EngageBay

    Zoho

    LiteFarm CRM

    N/A

    • David

    Kevin
    • Duncan

    Communications best practices

    We’re a distributed team, so communications are both super-important to getting work done and maintaining a strong team culture. These are a few best practices we can recommend!

    Tool

    Description

    Do

    Don’t

    Slack

    We use Slack for 90% of our team communication. It’s nice for discussing topics or jumping on a quick call. If you’re not a pro today, you will be soon!

    • Use Slack liberally to contact people

    • Use the “sprint-team” channel for communications about stories in the current sprint

    • Put up an away tag and pause notifications for an hour or two if you need to concentrate on something

    • Use Slack

    calls
    • huddles for quick chats where screen sharing / annotating are helpful (you need to have the desktop version, not the browser version to do this)

    • Search keywords if you’re trying to learn about something

    • Suggest integrations if it could be helpful!

    • Put up an “Away from keyboard” when you head to lunch, out for a walk, are in a meeting, or whatever

    • Keep conversations one-on-one if the whole team could learn or gain context from the discussion; instead go to a team channel

    Jira

    Jira is where we keep track of stories from sprint to sprint. Conversations specific to a particular story should take place on that story in the comments.

    • Add comments and questions to stories you’re working or can help with (this keeps the conversation contextual to anyone that is trying to learn about the functionality moving forward)

    • Respond to questions addressed to you without excessive delay. You can check Jira manually, or configure your preferences for notifications via email and/or Slack.

    Confluence

    Confluence is where we document overarching guidance documents as well as information that is helpful for anyone interested in LiteFarm. The majority of Confluence is open to the public.

    • Add comments to guidance pages if you have a question or comment about that particular guidance document

    • Use Confluence for really anything else…

    • Use Confluence for anything private - most of our Confluence is public

    Zoom

    All our sprint rituals take place on Zoom so they can be easily scheduled. Kevin and David have a full Zoom account. Otherwise, Slack is probably easier.

    Email

    Email is best for communications that will eventually exit the team, e.g. a question about payroll where we’ll need to cc an HR person.

    • Take engineering discussions to email

    WhatsApp

    Is someone out of the office, you can try WhatsApping them

    • Verify someone wants to be WhatsApped before you reach out to them via WhatsApp

    First Week Reading List

    These documents will prove useful in helping your orientate

    Other things for developers coming up to speed…

    ...