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How to Be the Contributor Maintainers Actually Want - Lessons from Pollinations.ai #489

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Description

@Circuit-Overtime

Event Name

How to Be the Contributor Maintainers Actually Want — Lessons from Pollinations.ai

Event Date

05/31/2026

Event End Date

05/31/2026

Start time in UTC

13:00

End time in UTC

13:30

Event Type

talk

Event Language

English

Event Location

Virtual

Organizer name

Ayushman Bhattacharya

Organizer URL

https://gdg.community.dev/gdg-on-campus-jis-university-kolkata-india/

Event URL

https://gdg.community.dev/gdg-on-campus-jis-university-kolkata-india/

Event Description

The pitch: Every student wants to "contribute to open source." Almost nobody thinks about what it looks like from the other side of the PR. I'm a maintainer at pollinations.ai — a free, open generative AI platform — and in this 30-minute talk I'll show what 30 seconds of contributor effort can save a maintainer 30 minutes of work, with concrete examples from our repo.

This isn't a meta-talk about the "maintainer crisis." It's a practical, opinionated session for students who are about to open their first PR — so they open one a maintainer actually wants to merge.

What I'll cover:

1. What a PR looks like from the maintainer's chair
Walking through a real triage queue: what gets merged in 5 minutes, what sits for a week, and why. Hint: it's almost never about the code.

2. The 5-minute pre-flight checklist that puts you ahead of 80% of contributors
Reading CONTRIBUTING.md. Searching closed issues before opening a new one. Running the linter locally. Writing a PR description a maintainer can review without opening the diff. None of this is glamorous; all of it works.

3. How I went from a typo-fix PR to maintainer at pollinations.ai
The actual path — starting by building on the project (a Discord bot on the Pollinations API) before contributing to it. Why "show, don't ask" beats "can I be a maintainer?" every time.

4. AI-assisted PRs: the new contributor trap
At pollinations we now see PRs that are clearly LLM-generated with no human review. I'll show what good AI-assisted contribution looks like vs. what gets closed on sight.

5. The Hacktoberfest lens
I've helped onboard 100+ first-time contributors during Hacktoberfest and co-hosted Kolkata's meetup with 290+ participants. The patterns that separate one-time PRs from contributors who come back are surprisingly consistent.

Who this is for: Students and early-career developers who want their first (or next) open source PR to actually land — not just exist. You'll leave with a checklist you can apply to any repo, that same day.

Participants

50

Maintainers

10

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