Summer of Code Org Application Deadline Approaches 39
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)!"
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Why not be grateful? (Score:4, Insightful)
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.
Re:Google redeems itself (Score:4, Informative)
They open source a *massive* quantity of their code and APIs.
Re:Google redeems itself (Score:4, Informative)
They're no saints, but they seem to put forth a good effort, which is a heck of a lot more than you can say about most corporations.
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Google Earth? (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you know what the phrase "undeserved sense of entitlement" means?
newbie suitable (Score:1)
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Have to look into that... thanks.
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Unfortunately, that's not something that's covered by the Summer of Code (documentation does not count as code), as much as many open source projects would welcome that.
Try finding an open source project you care about and help them with their documentation. I'm sure they'd be grateful.
Does SoC end with a best code contest? (Score:1)
suggested projects: Open source voting systems (Score:3, Interesting)
A person working on this could have worldwide lasting impact.
another project might be a YAML C++ library and the equivalent of XSLT for YAML.
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another project might be a YAML C++ library and the equivalent of XSLT for YAML.
That seems a little under-ambitious. Here's a little wrapper around the parser end of libyaml (which, if I remember correctly, was also a SoC project): http://git.snoyman.com/cppweb.git?a=blob;f=src/cppmodels/yaml.hpp;h=e67377c792309a51eb5a4c9dac05ba89befd38d6;hb=HEAD [snoyman.com].
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How many SoC "news" do we have to get? (Score:3, Insightful)
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?
Cron job? (Score:1)
"cron" job? I thought it was a "ZONK" job?
Wait, let me google ZONK......trying GNU ZONK ....hmmmmm....Holy Shit! It's..he's...she's a person?!?
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Re:How many SoC "news" do we have to get? (Score:4, Interesting)
Submit something yourself, maybe?
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Yes, I do think the front page is a scarce resource. The more crap is put there, the less valuable news is there. And just to clarify, it's the editor's fault other than the submitters.
I thought it was obvious, no?
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Darn it, posted in the wrong window (Score:1)
gee, thanks for the reminder! (Score:2)
news, not reminding us of things.
Oh, wait, it's a story about Google. My bad.
Let's rehash this again. All hail Google!
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What worries me about these projects (Score:3, Insightful)
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.
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Well, one of the questions on the signup form is
So Google does encourage the organisations to think about that problem in advance, too.