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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..."

27 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Nice idea, poor pay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:Nice idea, poor pay by eln · · Score: 5, Funny

      People on scholarships. Do you have any idea how much weed you can buy for $4500?

    2. Re:Nice idea, poor pay by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Did you consider that the internet, and this program, are accessible also from outside of your country?

    3. Re:Nice idea, poor pay by iambarry · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who says that many of those who participated in summer of code didn't also have summer CS ineternships?

      --Barry

    4. Re:Nice idea, poor pay by jzeejunk · · Score: 3, Funny

      but who were they really targeting at that pay range

      our brethren in banglore? ;)

      --
      sarchasm
    5. Re:Nice idea, poor pay by moo083 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you have skills but no experience, this is a way to get something on your resume.

  2. No VB? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    They didn't accept my VB entry?!

  3. How about a winter of code? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That was sucessful. Lets follow it up with a winter of code, and give the OSS world a christmas present

  4. dollars by termos · · Score: 3, Funny

    $4500. No problem.

    --
    Note to self: get smarter troll to guard door.
  5. Good idea! by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 4, Funny

    Get the next iteration of programmers comfortable with their tools and API's.

    I'm suspecting the future is going to smell like AJAX...

    Also, while barely literate, I'm pretty sure that dollar sign goes before the ammount...

    --
    Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
  6. So much publicity and all you win is... by TarrySingh · · Score: 4, Funny

    4500$!...geez!

    --
    Scott McNealy to Michael: "Suck my Sun!" Michael Dell to Scott : "Lick my Dell!"
  7. Other Results: by Quaoar · · Score: 5, Funny

    Percentage of summer of code participants getting laid: 0%

    --
    I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
  8. Interesting Demographics by mikesmind · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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.

    --
    www.mikesmind.com - www.daddyworkathome.com - www.freetofarm.org - www.tenfoottable.com
    1. Re:Interesting Demographics by university+chica · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm a senior in computer science at a university that has a total of 17000 students. I'm also the only female student in my graduating class. Conservatively, I'd say there are maybe 7 other female students in CS who've made it to their junior year. CS loses 99% of female students, and it's half way through the semester, so we may have lost a couple more. For a little perspective... there are over 100 guys in their junior or senior year. I don't understand it. I mean, who wouldn't want to spend their entire scholastic career surrounded by a collection of the geekiest men the university has to offer?

  9. Man look at the names by Anonymous+Crowhead · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's like a "Who's Who" list of who's not American.

  10. Google pays MCDONALD'S wages by Work+Account · · Score: 3, Interesting

    $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)!
    1. Re:Google pays MCDONALD'S wages by schon · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can make more at McDonald's

      Wow, McDonalds is hiring coders?

      especially considering meals are discounted 75%.

      Yeah, but the downside is that it's McDonalds "food".

    2. Re:Google pays MCDONALD'S wages by Beatbyte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How much would you sacrifice to get experience, build your reputation, and have Google on your resume?

    3. Re:Google pays MCDONALD'S wages by HavokDevNull · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your assuming everyone is from the USA or EU no?

      India
      GDP per capita $480
      Unemployment rate 8.8%
      Labor force 406 million
      Population below the poverty line 25%
      Typical salary for a programmer $8,000 year = $4.16 an hour

      source http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.02/india_pr. html

      If I lived and was a programmer in India Google would be a good choice considering only two months of work!!!!

      --
      Sig
  11. Hmmm, interesting projects by totallygeek · · Score: 5, Interesting
    • Ivan Barrera A, Chile: Bandwidth Limiter For Apache - When a user starts downloading something, the data goes through the mod. If there is a bandwidth limit, then the mod will start "splitting" the data into smaller pieces. Then it will start sending each piece with a small delay (less than 1 sec) between each piece, thus, reducing the speed the user downloads. This is useful for small web-hosting servers with limited outbound bandwidth (i.e. ADSLs customers).

      I don't even have that limited of bandwidth and I would like to see this mod in production. Very needed code IMHO.

    • csaba, Hungary - Fuse / BSD / Network mount via SSH

      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.



    1. Re:Hmmm, interesting projects by harryk · · Score: 5, Informative

      Secure Shell file system mount has been available as a module for some time. ssh_fs.o I think, or something, but it works sufficiently enough.

      the project is here: http://shfs.sourceforge.net/

      enjoy...
      harryk

      --
      think before you write, it'll save me moderator points.
  12. Other MozDev projects: by MTO_B. · · Score: 5, Informative

    The list of projects says "Please note that this page contains a sampling and not a complete listing of the projects done as part of the Summer of Code."

    The MozDev (related to Mozilla / Firefox) projects missing from the list are:

    - Cockatoo: SIP phone extension for Mozilla Thunderbird
    http://cockatoo.mozdev.org/

    - Firepuddle: BitTorrent P2P for Mozilla
    http://firepuddle.mozdev.org/

    - Event Loger (An advanced macro and testcase creation tool for Firefox)
    http://eventlogger.mozdev.org/

    - Muzzled: graphical theme builder for mozilla
    http://muzzled.mozdev.org/

    - Vietnamese translation of Firefox
    http://vi.mozdev.org/

  13. I'm a woman in CS by dptalia · · Score: 3, Informative
    And with the exception of one job, I've always been the only woman on the programming team. I even had an employer ask me if I was okay with being the only woman. My response: "And this differs from the past 10 years how?"

    At college most of the women went into chemical engineering, or varients (geological, biological, and there was one other which I can't remember). I don't know why more women don't care to program, but low stats for women doesn't surprise me a bit.

    --
    Genius is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration, which is why engineers sometimes smell really bad.
  14. Re:Some got paid considerably LESS than $9.30/hour by kebes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Math may not lie, but people can misrepresent what's going on.

    Google didn't pay these people anything. Rather, it provided grants/scholarships to people interested in working on open source code. People (coders and/or organizations) submitted proposals for ideas they wanted to work on, and Google selected some worthy ones that they would give extra money to, so as to encourage students to spend time doing some open-source coding.

    Google was not hiring these people to work on specific projects that get added to the portfolio of Google products. Everyone involved could have turned down the grant money if they had a better offer. But for these students, who would have likely worked on these (or other) open-source projects over the summer anyway (to bolster their CV and/or because it's fun), the grant was probably a welcome bonus.

    Everyone benefits from the open-source software that has been produced by these (partially funded) volunteers. Remember that the people working on these projects were contributing to open-source projects that are, by and large, non-commercial. That is, the summer-of-code people got $4500, whereas everyone else working on the project got $0. They are doing it because they want to. It is not a (traditional) job.

  15. T-Shirts? by The+Rizz · · Score: 4, Funny
    "Now we just have to wait for the T-shirts..."

    "I coded open-source software all summer, and all I got was $4500 and this lousy T-shirt" ??

  16. Re:Some got paid considerably LESS than $9.30/hour by Cornflake917 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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.

  17. Re:This was posted 6 WEEKS AGO! by HanClinto · · Score: 3, Insightful

    *don't feed the trolls, don't feed the trolls*... bah. I'll bite and reply.

    If you remember anything about the article from 6 weeks ago that you posted a link to, then you would remember that it was extremely thin as far as details went. Did you look at many of the projects when it was "officially over"? If you had, you would remember that a quite a number of them hadn't turned in their final versions yet, nor had they turned in their final reports (and if they had finished/turned in the report, then it wasn't available yet for public access, it had only been turned into their project supervisors).

    If you went to college, then maybe you remember that college students have a "habit" of turning stuff in at or after the deadline? The SOC was no different. That's why you don't get your grade results until a week or two *after* it's over. It takes time to figure out what-the-heck-happened during the flurry that was the deadline.

    You would have preferred this in a slashback then? Perhaps -- I for one was glad to see this, and I look forward to more updates as this list is completed. It will be good to see some more information about the results of the SOC, and what can be changed to improve it in the future.

    There was plenty of new information in this new article, after having read both of them, I frankly don't see what you're griping about.

    Next time, complain about a legitimate dupe. If things are as bad as you say they are, then you should have no trouble finding a real one.