Summer of Code Org Application Deadline Approaches
chrisd writes "Just wanted to drop a line reminding open source projects that they only have until March 12th (Pacific time) to apply for Google's Summer of Code. We are accepting more organizations this year than last because we want to add a couple hundred more students to the program. If you are part of a great project or know someone who is, we'd love to see an application. Please note that this is for organizations and not for prospective students, that's not for a few more weeks (see the program timeline)!"
For me it's always inexplicable that Google is held up as an company sympathetic to Free Software when their own products, such as Google Earth, remain closed. Still, we should be grateful that they do something useful for the community every summer by sponsoring projects where people can actually see and adapt the code produced.
What's next? Do we need a cron job to submit the same Google news every other week now? Or can we get SOME valuable news here?
IF you can't code, you'd better not take up the coding tasks - but there are tasks that require other skills, too. Of particular use is documentation writing, something that OSS programmers often dismiss as unimportant and boring or just because they don't have the "feel" for writing decent manuals. If you can express complicated ideas in a simple way, explain them clearly and make sense out of contorted processes in general, try your skills in this area, it certainly will help some user as much as a new feature in his favourite application.
This is Slashdot. Common sense is futile. You will be modded down.
Why? Are you not supposed to be grateful for anything that anyone does (partly) in their own interest?
Anyway, just wanted an opportunity to say that, as a frequent user of free software, I myself am very grateful for these annual contributions to the open source community.
Morality is usually taught by the immoral.
So, you're complaining that a software company that gives away it's software and services for free, doesn't also give away it's code for free? Remind me to never give you a Christmas present.
Do you know what the phrase "undeserved sense of entitlement" means?
is that the students go away after the code is submitted, when a large software project really needs someone who understands the code to stick around and maintain it.
I've seen a lot of summer of code projects that look really cool, but then you never see the feature ending up in the final product.
I think the summer of code thing is a good idea in that it gets students involved in the open source community, but I hope that the projects spend some time thinking about who will maintain the code after the kid is back in school, and I suspect that doesn't happen.