I've written some critical things about Ruby Central. I've also written about choosing to contribute anyway, because the community matters more than the org chart. So when the January 2026 newsletter landed in my inbox, I read it with a specific question: is Ruby Central showing up for the people who make this ecosystem work?
The short answer: yes, in some meaningful ways.
The Gala Awards
Ruby Central is hosting a gala with awards that recognize the kinds of contributions that often go uncelebrated. And the honorees they've chosen say a lot about what the community values right now.
Ruby Heart Award -- Emily Samp
The Ruby Heart Award honors extraordinary compassion and service to the community. Emily Samp is an Engineering Manager at Shopify, where she works on improving the Ruby development experience through open source tools like Sorbet and Prism. She's also an organizer and co-founder of WNB.rb, and current CEO of the group.
That combination matters. Working on Sorbet and Prism makes every Ruby developer's experience better. Co-founding WNB.rb makes sure "every Ruby developer" actually means everyone. She's doing both at the same time, and that's not an accident.
Ruby Guidepost Award -- Saron Yitbarek
The Guidepost Award recognizes mentorship and guidance of the next generation, and Saron Yitbarek is the right person for it. Saron is the founder of CodeNewbie (now owned by DEV), a developer, speaker, and podcaster. I've had the pleasure of seeing her speak at RubyConf and NDC London.
If you've ever been new to programming and found a community that made you feel like you belonged, there's a good chance Saron's work had something to do with it. CodeNewbie created space for people who were just starting out, at a time when "beginner-friendly" wasn't really a thing yet in tech.
Cutting Edge Award -- Nadia Odunayo
The Cutting Edge Award goes to bold experimentation and boundary-pushing work. Nadia Odunayo founded The StoryGraph, a book-tracking app that has grown to over 4 million users as a privacy-focused alternative to Goodreads. I'm a huge fan.
And here's the thing -- The StoryGraph is built with Ruby. Millions of people use it every day who have no idea what Ruby is. That's what pushing the boundaries of this ecosystem actually looks like.
Community Leadership Gem Award -- You Decide
The one that caught my attention is the Community Leadership Gem Award, which is community-nominated. That matters. Letting the community choose who to celebrate instead of a board making that call from the top down is a small but meaningful shift toward the kind of governance I've been asking for.
If you know someone doing quiet, consistent work to make the Ruby community better, nominate them.
New Board Members
Three new members joined the Ruby Central board:
Brandon Weaver has been writing Ruby for 15 years and is known for his conference talks and education work. Having someone on the board who's been in the trenches as a speaker and educator is good representation. He is good people, and will be pushing for communication and transparency with the board. No one knows Ruby like Brandon and I'm really excited to see what he does on the board.
Ran Craycraft is the Managing Director at thoughtbot. Thoughtbot has a long history of contributing to the Ruby ecosystem through open source and mentorship, so this feels like a natural fit.
Jey Flores leads Product Engineering at Code for America and previously worked at Bandcamp. Bringing in someone from the civic tech space broadens the perspective on who Ruby serves and how.
The RubyGems situation showed what happens when leadership stops listening to the people doing the work. Fresh voices on the board could help with that.
WNB.rb and the Volunteers Who Build Community
This is the part of the newsletter that I love is called out but heads up that I'm biased when it comes to WNB.rb. I've been a member of the community since it was founded and have joined up on WNB.rb's board. So the community means a lot to me, and I am so happy it is being shared in the newsletter.
WNB.rb (Women and Non-Binary Rubyists) group is transitioning from a founder-led organization to a community-managed one. That's hard work, and it's how you make something last.
The newsletter highlights two people by name:
Sarah Eggleston, WNB.rb's Deputy CTO, who's helped grow the community and make it a place people actually want to show up to. And Jess Sullivan, the Book Club Lead, who makes it okay to not know things yet. Both amazing people, who care deeply about Ruby and WNB.rb.
That last part is worth sitting with. Jess is normalizing imperfect learning. That doesn't show up on a GitHub contribution graph, but it changes how people experience this community.
WNB.rb's mission of making the Ruby community accessible to marginalized individuals entering tech is worth paying attention to. If you're not already involved, look into it and support the mission.
Looking Ahead
The newsletter also covers some forward-looking items worth noting:
- RubyConf 2026 is heading to Red Rock, Nevada, with a new "Ruby Runway" pitch competition for Ruby-based projects
- RubyGems.org Organizations is in private beta, adding multi-maintainer gem management (a feature that directly addresses some of the collaboration pain points I've seen firsthand)
- Google Summer of Code is looking for Ruby projects and mentors, with a focus on AI/ML and security
What This Means
Governance issues don't resolve in a few months, and trust takes time to rebuild. But spotlighting community volunteers by name, letting the community nominate its own awards, bringing in new board members -- that's Ruby Central showing that it knows the community matters. I'm really liking what I'm seeing with the continued communication.
The newsletter discussed in this post: Ruby Central README: January 2026
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