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Google Summer of Code 2012 is on

90 points| buddhika | 14 years ago |google-opensource.blogspot.com | reply

18 comments

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[+] JoshTriplett|14 years ago|reply
For anyone interested in or associated with the project/mentorship side of this, watch this presentation from the most recent linux.conf.au: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ydS4vXNzN0I

Summary: if you think of this purely in terms of getting contributions to your FOSS project, and in particular if you think about the amount of time spent mentoring versus the amount of time needed for a developer to write the code themselves, you're doing it wrong. It exists primarily to provide mentorship so that we'll have more FOSS developers in the future, and from that perspective it works awesomely, whether or not any individual project gets lucky and gets a pile of useful code.

[+] alpb|14 years ago|reply
This is a great organization. I've been a gsoc student 2 years ago and learned a lot from my project and earned a decent wage. Google pays hundreds of thousands of dollars for Open Source contributions done by these students.
[+] thedigitalengel|14 years ago|reply
I think the total budget is of the order of several million dollars.
[+] Kiryx|14 years ago|reply
What was the project about ? Was it a new project or an already existing one ? Also, based on what were you qualified for the program ?
[+] thedigitalengel|14 years ago|reply
This is the best -- I've literally built my software engineering career pivoting off this program.
[+] cookiecaper|14 years ago|reply
I love GSOC and I really, really wish that more companies would do something similar. It is a GREAT way to get much-needed improvements in open-source software, teach a student some real, in-the-trenches skills that will be used throughout his career (and hopefully kicking off a meaningful career in OSS and diverting from the dark path of corporate .NET/Java jockey), and get an amazing amount of development value per dollar.

The real question is, "why is Google the only company that does something like this?" Though it doesn't fit exactly the same way I could even see a similar mentorship program as part of Y Combinator or other startup incubators. There's really no excuse for companies like Red Hat, Yahoo, Canonical and others that are heavily dependent on OSS not to do this.

[+] wicker|14 years ago|reply
I completely agree with you on the merits of the program. Why don't more companies do it on the scale of GSOC? Organizing it must take multiple full-time people. It'd be great to see more programs where students get paid for their work but I want to point out that it's not the only way companies and students are both benefiting from collaboration.

I'm at Portland State and we've got a solid six-month capstone program in computer science where local companies, including several in open source, are working with student teams. I know electrical/computer has a similar program with a more hardware focus. It's not that GSOC is the only program where companies work with students, only the most visible.

[+] Danieru|14 years ago|reply
Last year I got to spend the entire summer rewriting 10K+ LOC of C into 2k loc of Perl(with increased performance!) and adding support for sqlite backends.

It was awesome.

What was I working on? Printing under linux.

Perhaps the very definition of not-sexy. Which is just fine by me since that leaves tons of unsolved challenges.

Before I would never have had the courage to contribute to a linux sub-system. Who am I to bug true unix hackers with inane questions like: "How do I build our package?" or "I'm sorry I made a mess of our changelog."!

GSoC solved this barrier. How? Because I knew I would be able to put in the time to learn the domain and be useful. And in turn they knew I would be around long enough to justify the inane questions.

I am very thankful for GSoC, and I think my new co-contributer, and former mentor, is as well.

[+] rileya|14 years ago|reply
This is an awesome program. I did it last year, and having it on my otherwise empty resume really helped in the internship hunt this year (I don't know if they used my GSoC evaluations or anything during the process, but I ended up landing a Google internship!).
[+] cbo|14 years ago|reply
Echoing rileya, GSoC was the shimmering star on my resume when I applied for my first internship two summers ago.

Mine wasn't at Google, but at a startup that decided to keep me on and just got acquired, so it all worked out pretty well!

[+] memset|14 years ago|reply
This looks great! I have a couple of questions!

I am considering applying as a mentor for an open-source project I maintain. The project - an Android app - has 30,000+ users, but the development team is basically me and a handful of folks who have submitted patches or are willing to mentor. Is this too "small-potatoes?"

I wasn't able to find a link for what the actual application will entail. Where can I find that?

Any tips, thoughts, or advice for people who have previously administered or mentored a project - particularly for small groups?

[+] LockeWatts|14 years ago|reply
I have no idea about how GSoC process or mentoring works, but I just wanted to say as a potential GSoC student it sounds like a cool project, and I hope that things like that are out there, whether yours or someone else's.