Google Summer of Code Expands 116
bakotaco wrote with news from the Summer of Code site: "We're Expanding the Summer of Code... After spot reviewing the applications we've received for the Summer of Code, we were struck with their high quality. As a result, we were able to increase the funds available to support 400 students, double our original number of 200. While this doesn't allow us to take all applicants, we thought that this would be a terrific thing to do for the mentoring organizations, the students, open source software and computer science."
Re:Where is squid? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Where is squid? (Score:1)
Re:Where is squid? (Score:3, Interesting)
I actually considered this for one of my projects, but didn't because (a) by the time I heard about it on slashdot they'd already picked all the projects, and (b) I normally only accept code from people who've proved their ability first... letting a student have free reign is damn scary.
Re:Where is squid? (Score:2)
As for mentoring time/difficulties, that's what the $500 (the chunk of the total $5000 that goes directly to the mentoring organization) is for.
That's nice... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That's nice... (Score:1)
Re:That's nice... (Score:2)
Re:That's nice... (Score:2)
You managed to squeeze that marvelous piece of flamebait in as the first reply of the first post!
Score!
Code/Love (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Code/Love (Score:5, Funny)
Sheez, the summer sure makes some people strange in the head.
Now excuse me while I go and compile my newly optimized subroutine. Man, that subroutine really pushes my buttons, you know what I mean?
Re:Code/Love (Score:2)
The 'no's are just a filtering heuristic.
Re:Code/Love (Score:2)
Cheap relatively safe recreational drug that makes chicks horny as hell, plenty of other drugs, birth control pills that were fairly available, the common STDs were mostly curable with a course of antibiotics or similar, and a general loving, free giving attitude combined with a "revolt against The Man" attitude. Now throw in the sense of impending doom for young men who would certainly be headed off to 'Nam.
*Everyone* got laid, even th
Re:Code/Love (Score:1)
Funny... I get a yes to that question rather often without ever asking the question. For some odd reason, I get chased. Go figure *shrugs*
Re:Code/Love (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Code/Love (Score:1)
Re:Code/Love (Score:1)
Re:Code/Love (Score:1)
At last a publicly held corporation that isn't (Score:4, Insightful)
Leadership (Score:5, Interesting)
Of all the things Google does right, this is one of them. They take the best and brightest -- and the get to know them well. So this year they are getting the value from 400 people working on cool Open Source projects that will benefit the whole world. Google gets props and free advertising for doing this, which is likely quite an endeavor. 400 computers networked... think of the Quake tournies!
Out of this piece of philanthropy (it really is philanthropy when you are paying programmers these days -- we need as much support as we can get!) -- Google will find at least TEN projects they can buy outright WITH the developer who they have ALREADY PAID $4500 to, making the deal SOFTER, turning $4500 into an investment perhaps saving them millions.
In my opinion, Google has really built the first known MONEY FARM known to man. All they have to do is water it and it will grow. Next summer, expect 800 people or more.
I'm doing an Open Source blogging/small business web services system called PHk (soon to be at phk.ca). The company I'm working for is paying me salary just to work on my own system -- because they want to be able to use it when it's done. And that's another success story with Open Source when your vocation is your vacation...
Anyone here working at Google this summer?
Re:Leadership (Score:3, Insightful)
Welcome to the new Open Source world folks. Software development used to be a lucrative rewarding profession (both intellectually and monetarily). Now its just a field of people climbing over themselves in order to write code for mega-corporations for free.
Re:Leadership (Score:2, Insightful)
Mega-corporations including the Apache Software Foundation, the Perl Foundation, the Python Foundation, Gaim, Samba, FreeBSD, NetBSD....
Re:Leadership (Score:2, Insightful)
What a great idea! The execs finally figured out how to get the people to work for them for free! No wonder they make tens of millions of dollars per year.
Re:Leadership (Score:2)
Now its just a field of people climbing over themselves in order to write code for mega-corporations for free.
Nope. I and millions of others will also get to befenit from the code for free. The difference is, the mega-corporations are now paying for it instead of having it done for free which accelerates the development process.
Google is doing this because they cannot compete with Microsoft as long as Microsoft controls the software.
Re:At last a publicly held corporation that isn't (Score:1)
I hear Carly Fiorina is in the market for a new job.
Maybe she can set Google back on the ``right track.''
Re:At last a publicly held corporation that isn't (Score:2)
No it isn't. However that perception is there because you generally only hear about when a company does something shitty. If it bleeds, it leads.
They're... (Score:5, Insightful)
Innovations? (Score:1)
On a totally unrelated note... (Score:2, Insightful)
- sm
Re:On a totally unrelated note... (Score:4, Funny)
And CERTAINLY much better than working for Electronic Arts.
Re:On a totally unrelated note... (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, many MS interns go back after college and get full time jobs
Remember: just because you don't like their business practices doesn't mean there aren't talented people at the MS campus. Those of you in freshmen/sophomore years studying CS or math should DEFINITELY consider MS for summer work.
You mean 4500. (Score:4, Insightful)
Chris
Re:On a totally unrelated note... (Score:1)
Working at McD's paid my way through university, kept gas in my car, taught me to work hard and as a member of a team.
It was never going to be a career for me, but without it, I doubt I'd be the successful geologist / GIS analyst I am today.
Sure it was hard work for little money, but looking back it was a great experience.
Where do you get that number? (Score:1)
Is it like the Summer Of George? (Score:3, Funny)
Jerry: Before we go any further, I'd just like to point out how disturbing it is that you equate eating a block of cheese with some sort of bachelor paradise.
Wow (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Wow (Score:5, Funny)
The student thing (Score:2, Interesting)
It's the beautiful people of course. (Score:1)
Re:The student thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Would it really hurt to participate in an opensource project and *not* get paid???
Re:The student thing (Score:2)
Because you may yet decide on a business, marketing, law or PR degree. Lord knows we don't need any more of those!
Re:The student thing (Score:1)
Re:The student thing (Score:2)
More Mentoring Organizations? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:More Mentoring Organizations? (Score:1)
And, nothing on the summer of code website seems to indicate that they'll now extend that deadline and take some more applications. So, they also probably won't be talking on any new mentoring organizations, as all of the current applications are already associated with one of the existing possible mentors.
Too bad really...
Re:More Mentoring Organizations? (Score:2)
Chris
Re:More Mentoring Organizations? (Score:2)
Why was the window so short, and what prevents extending it?
Re:News just in.... (Score:3, Funny)
er, I mean . . .
latest breakdown (Score:5, Informative)
Call me a cynic. (Score:1)
Re:Call me a cynic. (Score:3, Informative)
They aren't taking more submissions. They are just picking twice as many people from the original batch of applicants.
Re:Call me a cynic. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Call me a cynic. (Score:1, Redundant)
It's the summer of code, 2005 (Score:2, Interesting)
Or how your being made jobless first is now perhaps being used (in shades of hip and coolness of course, see also "street teams" for the music cartel, the military recruitment,
to put young folks into the geeks' version of an idol's competion where of course everyone loses even the winners., except... the organizers.
Perhaps I'm just too cynical, and no one wants to hear it anyway (which is a good indication that I might be on to something), but the whole google, gm
More jobless then not. (Score:1)
Re:It's the summer of code, 2005 (Score:1)
What? Why is this modded interesting? That sentence doesn't even make sense!
Re:It's the summer of code, 2005 (Score:3, Interesting)
It does, it just came out a little mangled.
You've heard of American Idol?
He's suggesting that all the coders are being laid off, while in the meantime, Google is setting up competitions where the unemployed can compete for scraps. These scraps don't amount to gainful employment for the laborers, but Google profits by way of good press and cheap, completed code.
I'm not entirely sure that I agree with this speculation (at least not to this degree) but its an idea. It could just be a cool idea that benefi
Re:It's the summer of code, 2005 (Score:1)
Re:It's the summer of code, 2005 (Score:2)
Re:It's the summer of code, 2005 (Score:5, Informative)
Next piece of FUD, please?
Before you bow down to Google... (Score:1)
Wow, thanks Google.
Re:Before you bow down to Google... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Before you bow down to Google... (Score:2)
Re:Before you bow down to Google... (Score:2)
Re:Before you bow down to Google... (Score:2)
Re:Before you bow down to Google... (Score:2)
Re:Before you bow down to Google... (Score:1)
400 * $5000 = $2,000,000 (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:400 * $5000 = $2,000,000 (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Let's hire kids and get them to work cheap! (Score:2)
Please, people, RTFA before you make disparaging comments. Or, for that matter, any comments whatsoever.
Ideas for applicants (Score:4, Informative)
Another great project that would be interesting to work with is Jinzora [jinzora.org]. Jinzora is a web-based music streaming/archiving application. It may be one of the best around.
Both applications are GPLed, fairly mature, actively developed and used, and are just plain useful tools to use.
Re:Ideas for applicants (Score:2)
So kids... sorry no Google glory for coding for these projects (unless you've already applied w/ an idea for one of these projects)... so just do it for fun, glory, karma, goodwill towards men, or whatever else drives you.
Re:Ideas for applicants (Score:2)
Aha (Score:1)
Open-source apps will be written without much incentive. Making them meaningful to users rather than developers is more difficult, and Google appears to be implementing a tested method for making it happen.
Secrets yet open (Score:1)
Hmm (Score:1)
<p>I would have gone in for it, and there was plenty of projects there I would have like to have done. But then I would be 'stealing' someone else's project that they will get paid for I suppose.</p>
Summer of Choad! (Score:1)
Summer of Choad Spreads?
Google Spreads the Choad?
More Choad from Google?
Google: Now with 100% more Choad?
Google's Hot Weather Choad Eruption?
Choad Coverage Up?
Summer of Choad Bubbling Up?
Google Frothing With Choad?
Google Unleashes Another Load Of Choad?
Can anyone help me out here?
Re:Slashdot. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Slashdot. (Score:2, Offtopic)
There does seem to be an overabundance of Google stories on /. Sure it matters to people, but thats what the content-specific sections are for. Not everything has to hit the front page, and indeed, usually they don't. It is rather frustrating when every 10th story is about Google, however. Sure, they lead the industry in giving back to the community and in trying to be philantropic, but theres only so much that can be posted about them before i
Re:Slashdot. (Score:2)
Re:It might be the Summer of Code (Score:2)
Do not be so quick to blame google.
Re:It might be the Summer of Code (Score:2)
Bad day for large network providers.
(Obviously those three don't represent the world, but three relatively major outages in one day is slightly unusual).