The focus of this community is, and should be, technical. But lots of people contribute to the "code" that gets written even if they don't write code. Librarians, archivists, catalogers, curators, etc., provide coders with real world problems that need to be solved. People who actually talk to users regularly provide (usually) good insight into how our data should be used / displayed/ filtered / tagged / whatever. Without that input, our code, and more importantly the applications they power and that users interact with, would be worse. Leave up to just the coders and all library software would just be plugins for irc chatbots. So it is vitally important for us to make sure this community includes, and *appreciates*, "non-coders". Chad