Find ways to get involved in the Raspberry Pi community in the 13th
article in our getting-started series.
![][1]
Things are starting to wind down in this series, and as much fun as I've had writing it, mostly I hope it has helped someone out there use start using a Raspberry Pi for education or entertainment. Maybe the articles convinced you to buy your first Raspberry Pi or perhaps helped you rediscover the device that was collecting dust in a drawer. If any of that is true, I'll consider the series a success.
If you now want to pay it forward and help spread the word on how versatile this little green digital board is, here are a few ways you can get connected to the Raspberry Pi community:
* Contribute to improving the [official documentation][2]
* Contribute code to [projects][3] the Raspberry Pi depends on
* File [bugs][4] with Raspbian
* File bugs with the different ARM architecture platform distributions
* Help kids learn to code by taking a look at the Raspberry Pi Foundation's [Code Club][5] in the UK or [Code Club International][6] outside the UK
* Help with [translation][7]
* Volunteer on a [Raspberry Jam][8]
These are just a few of the ways you can contribute to the Raspberry Pi community. Last but not least, you can join me and [contribute articles][9] to your favorite open source website, [Opensource.com][10]. :-)