Interview with Ted Gould of Inkscape
Friday, February 15th, 2008
Ted Gould is an open source developer working on desktop and usability on Ubuntu for Canonical. He’s also an active developer on the Inkscape project and enjoys photography. He lives in LA with his wife and son.
SCALE: Ted, tell us a bit about yourself. We know you work on Ubuntu, for Canonical, and you’re a developer on the Inkscape project.
Ted: And I use vi. I’m not sure if such a divisive question should start the interview
I’ve been an Open Source developer for a while, working on Sodipodi and GNOME before Inkscape started. Recently I got a job at Canonical which allows me to spend time doing more mainstream GNOME development.
Inkscape is a GTK+ program, thus using several GNOME technologies, but isn’t in GNOME proper. I’ve never lost my GNOME roots, remaining a member of the foundation and on e-mail lists but now I have more time to act.
I’m really enjoying working in Open Source. There are so many less secrets and things that “we don’t tell customers.” Sure, they know, but we couldn’t tell them, right? It’s frustrating for developers not being able to have an honest conversation and solve problems for people. I feel like I help more people when working in the open.
SCALE: Describe your typical day - how much is Ubuntu work and how much is Inkscape work? Do they overlap at all?

