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(adding one final important attention grabber)
(too late for the issue, my fault, but I'm going to put out the update here and link back to it from a few places)
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=== Students invited to submit proposals ===
=== Schedule moved back a month ===
 
In an announcement on 07 April, Fedora Summer Coding 2010 is inviting students to begin submitting proposals, as explained in the section "You are a student"<ref>https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010#You_are_a_student</ref> on the Summer Coding 2010 page.


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In a blog post, [[User:Quaid|Karsten Wade]] writes<ref>http://iquaid.org/2010/04/14/more-time-for-fedora-summer-coding-schedule-moved-back-a-month/</ref>, "In today’s SIG meeting<ref>http://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/summer-coding/2010-April/000064.html</ref>, the group decided to move back our schedule by a month so we can:


=== Ideas for Fedora Summer Coding Due April 14th ===
* Give mentors more time to generate good ideas;
* Give students more time to generate good proposals;
* Give organizers more time to find sponsors and funding.


Please submit your ideas for students to work on for the Fedora summer 2010 coding projects by April 14thThe Fedora Summer Coding SIG revised the date since the below blog post was written.
The post went on, "I’ll be updating the schedule<ref>http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010_schedule</ref> ASAP, but you can generally figure we’ll be adding 15 to 30 days to each deadlineI’ll send out new announcements to the developer’s list when it is updated."


[[User:Quaid|Karsten Wade]] writes<ref>http://iquaid.org/2010/04/06/ideas-for-summer-coding-due-by-9-april/</ref>,
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"While we finish the Summer Coding 2010 page, it is past time for you all to let us know the problems you would like to see solved by summer coding/internship students."  The idea<ref>https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Category:Summer_Coding_2010_ideas</ref> page has all of the ideas thus far, and there is also a page on how to fill out the ideas page<ref>https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_create_an_idea_page_for_Summer_Coding</ref>


"Let’s get this filled with serious ideas you are willing to mentor for or help find the mentor.
=== Search for sponsors continues ===


Join the discussion list and be prepared to talk about your ideas or proposals.  If you were already a mentor and want to help with mentoring, such as proposal reviews, let us know and join the mentors list.
In a follow-up post, [[User:Quaid|Karsten Wade]] wrote<ref>http://iquaid.org/2010/04/13/sponsoring-summer-coding-get-and-give-value/</ref>, "Has your company every wanted to partner with Google on their Summer of Code?  (It’s not something they share, and I know people have asked.)


Tracking these ideas is a PITA and in fact the lack of an ideas page lead to us not getting in the Google Summer of Code this year.  This is all part of a larger issue around tracking smaller ideas for beginners and students, but for now this will have to do.
Don’t answer too quickly.  You might want to check with some contacts in other departments, see if there ever has been interest in tapping the deeper benefits of sponsoring a summer coding event.


Anyone want to hack on OpenHatch.org<ref>http://OpenHatch.org/</ref>, please help.  We’re hoping some of the functionality we are handling manually may be included in upcoming versions of OpenHatch. If that direction gets us fruit, we may use OpenHatch as an ongoing way to expose projects to students and other new contributors."
Red Hat took a look, which I wrote up in a report in the fall of 2009<ref>http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/GSoC_report_2009</ref>, and that’s the main reason we are doing Fedora Summer Coding 2010<ref>http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010</ref>.


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If you work for or with an organization, business, foundation, non-profit, etc. that benefits from a better Fedora Project … consider if you have some budget to help fund a student proposal<ref>http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010#You_are_a_sponsoring_organization</ref>.


=== Sponsors sought for Fedora Summer Coding 2010 Projects ===
Aside from all the potential benefits to the Fedora Project that directly or indirectly benefit you, your company stands to gain more than positive brand image.<ref>http://iquaid.org/2010/04/02/seeking-sponsors-universities-corporations-foundations-individuals-creative-ideas/</ref>  You help teach the next generation about how to be involved in FOSS, which teaches them the skills you want them to have when you hire them.  Red Hat is not the only company who has hired former GSoC students.


[[User:Quaid|Karsten Wade]] writes<ref>http://iquaid.org/2010/04/02/seeking-sponsors-universities-corporations-foundations-individuals-creative-ideas/</ref>, "[a] cornerstone of our Fedora Summer Coding is connecting sponsors (those with resources to share) with students (those with time, passion, and skills to share.)  It’s not necessary as a sponsor to have ideas of how your resources should be used, that’s what the Fedora Project and JBoss.org mentors and sub-projects are prepared to do.
We have the next 9 or 10 days to get funding pledges from sponsors for this first round.  If you think there is any chance you or your organization might want to participate at any funding level, please contact me directly<ref>mailto:kwade@redhat.com</ref> and we’ll go from there.


We’ll also sort the student ideas, generate the list of approved proposals, work with the students throughout the summer, and make sure you hear back about how things went.  You can learn more about the model we are using in this blog post, Summer Of Code Swimchart: Now With More Generic<ref>http://blog.melchua.com/2010/03/04/summer-of-code-swimchart-now-with-more-generic/</ref>."
Even if you can’t make this first round, contact me anyway<ref>mailto:kwade@redhat.com</ref>. For example, we’re discussing scheduling a summer coding for the Southern Hemisphere.  This would make time for new sponsors in this calendar year.


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=== Students invited to submit proposals ===


=== Help organize Fedora's first solo summer coding effort ===
In an announcement on 07 April, Fedora Summer Coding 2010 is inviting students to begin submitting proposals, as explained in the section "You are a student"<ref>https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010#You_are_a_student</ref> on the Summer Coding 2010 page.
 
[[User:Quaid|Karsten Wade]] writes<ref>http://iquaid.org/2010/04/06/fedora-summer-coding-organizing-halp/</ref>, "[w]e are trying to turn the lights on for a new program this year, Fedora Summer Coding 2010<ref>https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010</ref>. ... If you are at all interested, join the SIG mailing list<ref>http://lists.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/summer-coding</ref> where we are discussing how all the structure comes together.  Use the step-by-step guide for organizers<ref>https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Summer_Coding_2010#Step-by-step_for_organizers</ref> to get started."
 
The blog post continues, "This is more than making lemonade out of lemons<ref>http://iquaid.org/2010/03/18/fedora-summer-coding-continues/</ref>.  After we figured out<ref>http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/GSoC_report_2009</ref> that the whole idea of summer coding wasn’t kinda-sorta-good but actually pretty great when done right for your own community, it was clear we needed to do our own implementation of the summer coding model<ref>http://blog.melchua.com/2010/03/04/summer-of-code-swimchart-now-with-more-generic/</ref> that Google first defined.
 
Although the plan was to test ideas during GSoC this year, we don’t get that luxury. Instead, we get the enviable position of taking a cool brand, Fedora, and create for it our own program to meld college students, mentors, summers, code, and community."


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Revision as of 16:51, 15 April 2010

Special topic: Fedora Summer Coding

This section covers the news surrounding the Fedora Summer 2010 Coding[1].

Contributing Writer: Karsten Wade

Schedule moved back a month

In a blog post, Karsten Wade writes[1], "In today’s SIG meeting[2], the group decided to move back our schedule by a month so we can:

  • Give mentors more time to generate good ideas;
  • Give students more time to generate good proposals;
  • Give organizers more time to find sponsors and funding.

The post went on, "I’ll be updating the schedule[3] ASAP, but you can generally figure we’ll be adding 15 to 30 days to each deadline. I’ll send out new announcements to the developer’s list when it is updated."

Search for sponsors continues

In a follow-up post, Karsten Wade wrote[1], "Has your company every wanted to partner with Google on their Summer of Code? (It’s not something they share, and I know people have asked.)

Don’t answer too quickly. You might want to check with some contacts in other departments, see if there ever has been interest in tapping the deeper benefits of sponsoring a summer coding event.

Red Hat took a look, which I wrote up in a report in the fall of 2009[2], and that’s the main reason we are doing Fedora Summer Coding 2010[3].

If you work for or with an organization, business, foundation, non-profit, etc. that benefits from a better Fedora Project … consider if you have some budget to help fund a student proposal[4].

Aside from all the potential benefits to the Fedora Project that directly or indirectly benefit you, your company stands to gain more than positive brand image.[5] You help teach the next generation about how to be involved in FOSS, which teaches them the skills you want them to have when you hire them. Red Hat is not the only company who has hired former GSoC students.

We have the next 9 or 10 days to get funding pledges from sponsors for this first round. If you think there is any chance you or your organization might want to participate at any funding level, please contact me directly[6] and we’ll go from there.

Even if you can’t make this first round, contact me anyway[7]. For example, we’re discussing scheduling a summer coding for the Southern Hemisphere. This would make time for new sponsors in this calendar year.

Students invited to submit proposals

In an announcement on 07 April, Fedora Summer Coding 2010 is inviting students to begin submitting proposals, as explained in the section "You are a student"[1] on the Summer Coding 2010 page.