Summer of Code Student Applications Now Open
The accepted Google Summer of Code 2007 mentors list is now complete at the Summer of Code website — 131 projects could use your help. Student applications are open and the end date is March 24. Google has an application guide in the Summer of Code Announce discussion group that provides more information on the application process.
Go SoC!
I prefer the Summer of Sex.
http://wiki.laptop.org/go/WiXi
Crystal Space is on the list. Its an open source 3D/game engine. Cant wait till this is done and ported to some consoles.
Libertarian Leaning Political Discussion Forum.
Fonts are small, clear, sharp and crisp. I wonder whether such a screenshot is possible without MS fonts. If it is, then my request is to have steps involved to achieve this done away with. That's why I emphasize "default" in this submission.
Have a look at http://www.kdevelop.org/graphics/screenshots/3.0/s ubclassing2.png
Our project - a fairly well known OSS project got rejected. We had a good comprehensive list of projects (that, IMO, rivals some of the big players in the announced list).
We received no explanation of any kind. I understand that Google doesn't owe us anything, but surely some feedback will help us improve in the future, especially that we are trying to garner some corporate support.
Anyone in the same boat? any ideas why this could happen?
http://wiki.zope.org/zope3/SummerOfCode2007
If you want to code for Zope, go check it out.
BZ
From the Haiku OS website:
"We are pleased and at the same time thrilled to inform the community that Google has accepted our application to become a mentor organization for the Google Summer of Code 2007. Yes, we have made it! Students now have until March 24 to apply for any of our project ideas from the GSoC Web App for Student Applicants. If you are a student and are interested in working on one of our project ideas, please check out our List of GSoC Ideas and Students: How to Apply pages for detailed information."
See http://www.haiku-os.org/ for relevant links.
i consider myself somewhat of a novice but i may not mind getting involved. how much experience should a coder have in order to participate in this? even if i don't apply for a project can we follow the resolution of issues that are being presented?
Google has been doing this now for some years with what appear to be fairly impressive results - I wonder if we might start to see other companies pick up on this a little. What about, say, the major Linux distributions sponsoring some projects for the major open source desktops? Or universities sponsoring some scientific software (I was very interested to see fityk on the supported list this year)? Or perhaps IBM could sponsor some work? There should be many possibilities.
Google is supporting quite a lot of work and a great many projects, but it is unavoidable that many useful projects will fall though their net - they have only so much support they can offer. I would be interested to see other companies either partner with Google or do on their own what Google is doing - if Google can do so much, what could 5 or 10 more companies using the same basic method accomplish?
"I object to doing things that computers can do." -- Olin Shivers, lispers.org
Just look through and try to find something you find interesting. If you are a novice/intermediate programmer, you will stretch your abilities and, hopefully, learn a lot.
Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
Does it run apache?
I mean, really, does it?
--- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
Different from 2005 SoC, many projects haven't published a balance showing their achivements at Google SoC 2006. One example is the Gaim project. At 2005 they created a blog, so the students posted all their advances and priblems they have faced. But in 2006 almost no information was release, nor you saw any improvement at the Gaim's main tree. I suggest one rule for any OSS project apply for the Summer Of Code is to publish a balance of ALL the projects/students it coached at the previous year.
They probably just prefer to arbitrarily decide on the candidates instead of spending time looking into the details. At least with their hiring decisions they seem to be pretty arbitrary as well.
I would probably apply to this program, but the pay really really sucks, wow.
$4500 for the summer?
I'm a math PhD student, writing a dissertation in numerics. I made 5 times that much last summer *after tax*, and I imagine most other CS-type graduate students can get about the same. $4500 is chicken feed.
Project to add a somewhat specialized encoding to libiconv at the LibLime ideas page: http://wiki.liblime.com/doku.php?id=googlesummerof codeideas#add_marc-8_support_to_libiconv
There are a lot of libraries out there that would really appreciate that one :-).
There are also a bunch of other Open Source Game projects you can work on, here is a short list.
I'll be in freshman year of undergrad next year. If I get a team together and everything, can I apply as a student for SoC 2007?
Take it from an old man -- you have plenty of time later in life to sit hunched in front of a computer. The time where you can interact with young ladies in the real world is limited :)
RockBox (http://www.rockbox.org/) made it to the list!
The alternative firmware for mp3 players was mentioned on slashdot several times: http://slashdot.org/search.pl?query=rockbox
GNUstep has a lot of different projects to offer - from entry level improvements for the beginner (like compiling the missing classes in GNUstep compared to current Cocoa and creating the header files) to advanced tasks like porting Apple's WebKit over to GNUstep (here you would need proper ObjC++ and C++ skills) or improving GNUsteps integration into the MS Windows Platform (tighter integration into the Windows look and feel, Windows programming skills are welcome). So there is something for everybody.
i n_Google_Summer_of_Code_2007e -2007.html
2 007 (the wiki requires a registration here: webmasters@gnustep.org since we got a lot of wikispam before)
newspieces:
http://digg.com/programming/GNUstep_participates_
http://gnustep.blogspot.com/2007/03/summer-of-cod
ideas:
http://wiki.gnustep.org/index.php/Summer_Of_Code_
regards, Lars
Our project - a fairly well known OSS project got rejected. We had a good comprehensive list of projects (that, IMO, rivals some of the big players in the announced list). We received no explanation of any kind. I understand that Google doesn't owe us anything, but surely some feedback will help us improve in the future, especially that we are trying to garner some corporate support. Anyone in the same boat? any ideas why this could happen?
http://www.chatgroups.de