Google Summer of Code Program Overhauled 37
lisah writes "Though at first glance Google's Summer of Code (SOC) 2007 looks pretty much the same as last year's event, it turns out much of the program has been overhauled based on feedback from past participants. The biggest change is the amount of lead time given to applicants and mentoring organizations in the hopes of increasing the applicant pool and allowing everyone to be better organized once the program gets officially underway on May 28. SOC organizers say they are also aware that slow payment to last year's participants has been a bone of contention and they are taking steps to 'make sure that the problem is diminished or will not happen again.'"
The dark side... (Score:1)
Google doesn't want to be planting any seeds for a "winter of discontent" after a busy summer. There's enough Google bombs as it is.
it's not fair (Score:1, Funny)
participate in the program
waste their time in the summer when they should be partying
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It also misses the point that $20000 is a very high tuition, relatively speaking, and US tuitions are high PRECISELY BECAUSE there are government guaranteed student loans. Tuition rates have risen steadily 5+% per year since the 70
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Of those four things, student loans are pretty much the only form of consumer debt that makes sense. In business, you take on debts if you're reasonably certain you'll make enough profit on the borrowed money to pay off the interest and then some. The same rationale applies for student loans. Bankruptcies are a failure to manage debt properly. (Sometimes the failure is unavoidable--m
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You have a $40,000 (gross) a year job, and you expect to have $30,000 in disposable income? I'd like to live in your fantasy land. However for the rest of us, in the real world, $40,000 a year is a pretty decent paying job and assuming no state tax you'll only have $32.5k per. year a actual money. Which doesn't include the ~4k-8k you should be putting in your 401k, and any medical contributiuons. Then you almost certianly need a car, you'll have bigger expenses for work clothing and obviously need rent and
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If you're not going to get a decent job, then don't go to expensive colleges and think to yourself that you can afford it unless you willingly choose to saddle yourself with debt, at which point it's nothing you should be whining about later.
OK. That leaves 20k to pay down debts, and a four year schedule, assuming no raises or other increases in income.
If and onl
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So a good education is only for the rich, or for people who are going to do well at subjects that make them rich? There are a lot of subjects that require degrees (or masters degrees) that do not pay $40k a year to people straight out of college. Maybe you were luck
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If you're poor, there are scholarships. If you're studying business, liberal arts, or social sciences, you likely have enough free time to get a job while you're in college. And if you're middle class, your parents may have saved some money f
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Remember, in the economic process list, the government has PID==0. It is the swapper process. Considerable amount of friction involved, though.
YMMV. This may be acceptable to you. In the end, all hearts quit beating, and all of this bickering and arguing over whose government was cooler than whose amounts to little.
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I dont much care for the money, but it would have been a great opportunity to interact with the opensource community and I regret not getting an opportunity to do that!
Sometimes, rules have a queer way of not being fair!
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Re:Just a thought... (Score:5, Informative)
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In what countries can you not legally give (reasonably small sums of) money to someone??? Documentation of why they received it? "Services rendered", "gift", or in some of these bass-ackwards places, just write "dowry". Or if local banks cause the problem, just send them cash in their local currency - problem solved.
This involves a mere $4500. Not suitcases full of unmarked bills.
Why do you think all
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In what countries can you not legally give (reasonably small sums of) money to someone??? Documentation of why they received it? "Services rendered", "gift", or in some of these bass-ackwards places, just write "dowry". Or if local banks cause the problem, just send them cash in their local currency - problem solved.
This involves a mere $4500. Not suitcases full of unmarked bills.
Argentina and Brazil for starters.
4500 dollars is around 14000 argentine pesos, which is a bit more then most people make in a year. Doesn't sound like "mere $4500" very much.
You have to remember once in a while that whatever applies in the US doesn't apply everywhere.
Re:Just a thought... (Score:4, Informative)
Do you have any oil? (Score:5, Funny)
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Blaine
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Have you never done business with Brazilians before, or do you require all payments to be made in US dollars to a US bank account?
obviously, rinse and repeat for most of the countries in the world..
Overhauled... (Score:4, Funny)
Payments (Score:1)
If people knew of all the internal administrative problems within Google...
semi-ot plug flagrante (Score:1)