Google Summer of Code Results
Nattfodd writes "Almost two months after the projects, deadline, partial (but fairly complete) results of Google Summer of Code are here. The completion rate of projects (and thus payment of the students) was approximately 90%, which would certainly qualify for a 'huge success' of the operation. Summer of Code paid more than 400 students of 49 countries to spend their summer helping open-source projects, 4500$ on completion. Now we just have to wait for the T-shirts..."
Its a nice thing for Google to try to do, but who were they really targeting at that pay range? A decent summer internship in CS pays 2-4 times that much.
That was sucessful. Lets follow it up with a winter of code, and give the OSS world a christmas present
I scanned through the list and am intrigued by the demographics. I was surprised that there weren't a few more women. I always knew that programming was dominated by men, but I didn't realize it would be that far skewed. The shop I work in is primarily COBOL and we have a good percentage of women working here. Perhaps that skewed my perception.
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$4500 for a summer of work ->
Summer = 12 weeks
1 work week = 40 hours
Total = 480 hours per summer
BEFORE taxes, this is $9.30 / hour.
I can make more at McDonald's especially considering meals are discounted 75%.
If you "get" pointers add me as a friend (116)!
I don't even have that limited of bandwidth and I would like to see this mod in production. Very needed code IMHO.
This is what I have been waiting for since the dawn of time. Well, not that long, but I have always wondered when I would be able to mount remote file systems via secure shell.
Click here or here.
So the average GSoC participant worked on their project 40 hours a week? Can I see where you got these statistics please?
Even if you're right...
$9/hr is 75% (thats (9.00-5.15)/5.15*100% ) increase over minimum wage. Maybe to you that is "scant" more than minimum wage. But to someone who's never had a job or has only had minimum wage type jobs, it's not scant at all.
You say mathematics don't lie. However, I fail to see you actaully use any mathematics to prove your point.
Also it seems you left out a few obvious things like:
- Working at Walmart sucks ass.
- Working for one of the GSoC project might be fun and a good learning experience.
- The GSoC project will look good on your resume.
- Working at a fast food place or as a cashier won't get you coding experience.
Abaddon: An Xbox 360 Indie game