Summer of Code Student Application Deadline Looms 33
chrisd writes "Hi everyone, just wanted to do one last shake of the old tree...the Summer of Code student application deadline is coming up on the 26th. We've got some great applications but I'd love to see more. We're accepting 800 students this year into the program and we have 131 open source organizations who'd love to see you apply. Anyone can talk about open source but you could be coding some with some of the best developmers out there. Apply today." Just a note: the 26th is an extension of the previous deadline. If you thought you wouldn't have time, you now have until next Monday. Get crackin'.
Where is the bleeding edge? (Score:1, Insightful)
I think that where we really need fresh ideas is in the field that has been in the experimental phase ever since computers were invented: artificial intelligence. It would be great to see Google's massive hardware resources applied to creating (or trying to create) stuff like an artificial consciousness.
Let the old guys do the incremental improvements, young programmers should spend one summer doing things no one has ever tr
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In one summer, for the equivalent of a grad student's stipend?
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Parent is ridiculous. AI gets a good representation from e.g. the Fast Artificial Neural Network Library [google.com], and there are lots of innovative and experimental project ideas--see for instance Squeak's [google.com] collaborative development [squeak.org] proposal.
Can we say karma whore?
Re:Where is the bleeding edge? (Score:4, Insightful)
Something open-ended and nebulous like artificial consciousness is better suited for... postgrad work. Which students are also very welcome to apply for. As soon as they graduate
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Considering the vast majority of new graduates are going to take a job where they're working on someone else's codebase tracking down bugs, implementing new functionality, and generally making improvements, the projects make quite a bit of sense. Further, if you read some of the details of what the various projects are talking about, som
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Could be, but one would expect more from a company whose name became a verb in the English language. If all a new graduate expects to do is to track down bugs in someone else's program one should say goodbye to all innovation.
What Google should be looking for is to
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The last time I checked, Google leveraged a huge amount of Open Source software in their infrastructure to make said innovation happen. As a result, they've solved bugs, implemented functionality, and probably done 100x more things that I simply don't know about.
A career in software
GNUstep ! (Score:3, Informative)
For those unaware, GNUstep got accepted this year [blogspot.com] ... So if you want to discover a neat little OO language (Objective-C), and work on a really great framework, don't hesitate !
GNUstep [gnustep.org] is a free implementation of the OpenStep API, cross-platform (windows, linux, etc), close to Apple's Cocoa (ie, Cocoa is itself an extension of the OpenStep API, so in fact you can port Cocoa app to GNUstep and vice-versa -- GNUstep can now even read/write apple nibs natively). In addition to the frameworks, there's nice development tools, in particular Gorm, the GNUstep's pendant to InterfaceBuilder.
Check the GNUstep wiki [gnustep.org] to see a list of potential projects !
Spellcheck Anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
(Yes, I know a polymer is not a chain of polys. It's supposed to be funny. Leave me alone.)
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Great Program! (Score:5, Informative)
I have been participating as a mentor for the SoC program since it started, and I highly recommend it. It is a great way to get paid, gain valuable experience and a great resume booster, and write code which will be used by thousands or millions of people! Your can read about the successful creations of Nmap SoC students in 2005 [slashdot.org] and 2006 [seclists.org].
This year I am involved with three projects which have been accepted for SoC this year:
And even if none of those projects float your boat, there are 128 others to choose from [google.com]. Remember that you can apply for multiple projects, and doing so can (with sufficient care and detail for each application) be a good way to increase your odds.
-Fyodor
Insecure.Org [insecure.org]
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Don't have to read that twice!
Ah well. (Score:1)
Re:Ah well. (Score:4, Informative)
The exact nature of the agreement varies from project to project, at the decision of the project. Common agreements assign ownership of the code to the project, or assign ownership to the student but guarantee a perpetual licensing agreement with the project.
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And the Southern Hemisphere? (Score:1)
Wikimedia's open projects (Score:1, Informative)
Open Source Game Projects! (Score:2, Informative)
There are also a bunch of other Open Source Game projects you can work on, here is a short list.
If you are interested in game programming you should give them a look.
Better join MoinMoin.. :) (Score:1)
If you ask why you surely would prefer it, I have just one short answer: MoinMoin is coded in python, while MediaWiki is, uhm, "coded" in PHP..
But all in all - the MoinMoin project is developing a popular wiki engine with steadly growing popularity - big names like Apache, Ubuntu, Python, Debian, Fedora, Xen, KernelNewbies, linuxwiki.org (de), etc. are all using MoinMoin to keep the contact goi
No Mythtv this year.... (Score:2)
Mythtv was on the SOC list last year but I don't think we saw much in the way of enhancements - just an 'experimental' add detection algorithm which you can use instead of the standard one. They had a list of things they wanted done, most importantly making setup a bit easier and a new (ajax?) UI.
The latest Ubuntu (Feisty) includes support for the PVR-150 out of the box, (IVTV drivers?), and will include more for Mytht
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It's too bad, I support the idea of SOC, but maybe it needs closer inspection of actual work done prior to paying them. (currency exchange problems aside)
Re:No Mythtv this year.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with SoC is that the participants are like (inexperienced) contractors to the project. All other devs on the projects are (usually) non-paid spare-time developer.
This means that the SoC students have to be treated differently, which some mentors didn't expect. Since they're inexperienced, they usually plan far more than they could ever achieve in the time frame, but some projects picked those first since they sounded best. They expected the students to complete their work after deadline, so they gave them a positive review, even though nothing was finished. Of course, nothing happend, since students are used to dropping everything after a course is done.
For example, take a look at the Haiku project's SoC ideas [haiku-os.org]. They didn't participate last year, so they haven't learnt that lesson yet. Most of these projects are like a large master's thesis, some even more! That's ridiculous, there's no way any SoC student would be able to do that in the given time frame.
When students try to work on a project that's far above their head, you can expect that they constantly talk to their mentors about how to do it.
Gallery (Score:2)
The Gallery Project [sf.net] hasn't yet seen a big interest in the 2007 Summer of Code. We'd like to encourage all interested students to apply before the deadline. Please don't wait until the last minute!
Students should feel free to submit their own project idea. In fact, we strongly suggest you submit your own project idea and have updated our ideas page [menalto.com] to reflect this. You don't have to start from scratch - our "Create your own idea!" section has links to several areas with possible ideas. The Sample Ideas
last nanosecond idea: mediawixi (Score:1)
will turn wikipedia (and mediawiki sites) into a useful language
learning interface a.) people can use to teach/learn language and
b.) machines can use to improve statistical machine translation