The Sakai Foundation is the legal home for Sakai, and provides a central infrastructure and coordination point for the whole community. The infrastructure is periodically reviewed by the Foundation for its fitness for community use. Therefore, over time, you can expect improvements and additions.
The links in this section direct you to the Foundation-sponsored infrastructure:
http://sakaiproject.org: This is the home page of the Sakai Foundation. It is a good jumping-off point for beginners. The site is updated daily.
http://bugs.sakaiproject.org/confluence: Confluence is an enhanced Wiki where a large amount of information resides. Similar in editorial freedom as Wikipedia, you can create your own account, and add and modify content.
https://confluence.sakaiproject.org/display/TCC/Home : This is Sakai 2's Technical Coordination Committee (TCC) home page. TCC works with the existing community groups and processes to provide technical direction, advice, and coordination that both nurtures and enhances Sakai 2's ecosystem.
http://bugs.sakaiproject.org/jira : This is the bug database known as Jira, which keeps track of all the currently unresolved Sakai-related issues, historic bugs that have been removed, feature requests, and a list of the configurations of many production servers around the world.
http://source.sakaiproject.org/release : This is the location for downloading the current version of Sakai.
https://source.sakaiproject.org/svn/sakai : This is the source code. Note that you can see the code via a web browser.
https://source.sakaiproject.org/contrib : This is the location of the contributed source code. There are over 168 individual directories with lots of extra tools, experiments, and new features that may one day make it into the main code base.
http://opensource.org/licenses/ecl2.php : This provides you with Sakai's license.