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Summer of Code 2006 is On

chrisd writes "The Summer of Code is officially on again this year. As of today, we're taking in applications from mentoring organizations, so watch that list of mentoring organizations grow! Then, starting May 1st, we'll start taking student applications. We've prepared two FAQs, one for Mentors and one for Students. We've also have created an IRC channel and Google Group for you. The website for the Summer of Code can be found at http://code.google.com/soc/."

9 of 117 comments (clear)

  1. Re:About the IRC channel by chrisd · · Score: 4, Informative
    It isn't really about Freenode, but I'm used to being on slashnet. So there you go.

    Chris

    --
    Co-Editor, Open Sources
    Open Source Program Manager, Google, Inc.
  2. Re:What happened to all last years projects? by gstein · · Score: 4, Informative
  3. Re:Summer of Code 2005 was teh fail by nanop · · Score: 3, Informative
    It seems that the mono project had better results: http://tirania.org/blog/archive/2006/Apr-13.html
    • 3 projects never completed (QNX, CIL C++ extensions, XSLT compiler).
    • 2 projects half-done, and the resulting code is not very useful (Ruby.NET and GCC CIL).
    • 11 projects that were completed to our satisfaction (Cecil/write support, MSBuild implementation, ASP.NET GUI designer, bug finder, XAML Compiler, Diva Video Editor, PHP Compiler for .NET, Monodoc improvements, Windows.Forms' DataGridView and JScript class library implementation)
  4. Re:What happened to all last years projects? by yogikoudou · · Score: 5, Informative

    Miguel de Icaza, founder of the Mono project, made a blog post yesterday about the state of the SoC projects for Mono : http://tirania.org/blog/archive/2006/Apr-13.html
    11 projects out of 16 were continued, 6 students still being involved in Mono today.

    The Mozilla project had far less chance : None of the 10 projects are alive as of today : http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/gerv/archives/2006/ 03/summer_of_code_six_months_on.html

    I guess they'll be more carefull about the motivations of the people the choose this year...

  5. Re:Cheaper than outsourceing to India by damiam · · Score: 4, Informative

    What are you talking about? SOC participants get paid $4500.

    --
    It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
  6. If you think about applying... by shalunov · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...please take a look at my little piece on grading proposals Summer of Code 2005 written after the students who made it were selected.

  7. Re:About the IRC channel by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yeah, but then you're just trading it for Lilo notice spam, screwed up hostname spoofs that goes against the rfc, and other silliness. Why not just have it over MSN Chat if you're going to violate all the relevant standards anyways?

    --
    Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
  8. Nmap project was a great success by fv · · Score: 5, Informative

    What will GOOG do to stop the same outright shambles this time round?

    The page you linked to says nothing about outright shambles. He specifically says "I don't want this post to be seen as bashing either SoCcers or mentors". The page offers some excellent comments and suggestions for 2006, and I'm glad to see that Google is listening (Chris responded in the comments). Some of the suggestions are also meant for us mentors. The Nmap project is proud to have been invited to participate in SoC again for 2006, and we are looking forward to it!

    You can call it "outright shambles" if you want, but all the emails I have from participants talking about how much they learned and enjoyed the program speak otherwise. And was it valuable to the Nmap project too? Take a look at their efforts and decide for yourself:

    • Doug Hoyte nearly tripled the size of the version detection database, and added OS/device type/hostname detection using the version detection DB. He made numerous other improvements as well.
    • Zhao Lei added more than 350 OS detection fingerprints to Nmap, bringing the total to 1684. He also helped design a 2nd generation OS detection (stack fingerprinting) system.
    • Adriano Monteiro designed and implemented an advanced Nmap GUI and results viewer named UMIT (screenshots).
    • Ole Morten Grodaas designed and implemented another advanced Nmap GUI and results viewer (its nice to have choices in open source!) named NmapGUI. Details and download here)
    • Chris Gibson has written a sweet little network tool named Ncat, which takes the venerable Netcat in an interesting and extremely useful direction with features such as connection brokering, socks proxying, and much more.
    • Paul Tarjan added the runtime interaction feature to Nmap. While Nmap is running, you can now press 'v' to increase verbosity, 'd' to increase the debugging level, 'p' to enable packet tracing, or the capital versions (V,D,P) to do the opposite. Any other key (such as enter) will print out a status message giving the estimated time until scan completion.

    They did much more -- these are just some of the highlights. So I, for one, am looking forward to continuing these outright shambles again this year! But at the same time, there is always room for improvements . So I appreciate Gerv's constructive criticism.

    -Fyodor

  9. Re:What happened to all last years projects? by pablodiazgutierrez · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you did that and got the money from Google, you've just put those $4500 in risk by publicly admitting not having done the job yourself.