From Fedora Project Wiki

(linking to my blog post in the admonition; guess I better self-identify as a project leader)
(making it a bit clearer this page is closed)
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{{admon/note|Fedora Project and JBoss.org were not accepted as mentoring organizations for the 2010 Google Summer of Code.|[http://iquaid.org/2010/03/18/fedora-summer-coding-continues/ Read this blog post by one of the project leaders, Karsten Wade].}}
{{admon/note|Fedora Project and JBoss.org were not accepted as mentoring organizations for the 2010 Google Summer of Code.|[http://iquaid.org/2010/03/18/fedora-summer-coding-continues/ Read this blog post by one of the project leaders, Karsten Wade].}}


This page is for students, mentors, sub-projects, and upstreams working with the Fedora Project or JBoss.org on the Google Summer of Code 2010.  Look back to this page for more information as it becomes available.
{{admon/tip|If you wanted to participate as a student, mentor, sub-project, or sponsor for Fedora or JBoss ...|Go to the [[Summer Coding SIG]] for more information.}}


{{admon/tip|If you wanted to participate as a student, mentor, sub-project, or sponsor for Fedora or JBoss ...|Go to the [[Summer Coding SIG]] for more information.}}
This page was created for students, mentors, sub-projects, and upstreams working with the Fedora Project or JBoss.org. Since the our mentoring organization was not accepted for the 2010 Google Summer of Code (GSoC), this page is now ''closed''.


The Google program website is found here:  http://socghop.appspot.com
The Google program website is found here:  http://socghop.appspot.com

Revision as of 17:07, 19 March 2010

Note.png
Fedora Project and JBoss.org were not accepted as mentoring organizations for the 2010 Google Summer of Code.
Read this blog post by one of the project leaders, Karsten Wade.
Idea.png
If you wanted to participate as a student, mentor, sub-project, or sponsor for Fedora or JBoss ...
Go to the Summer Coding SIG for more information.

This page was created for students, mentors, sub-projects, and upstreams working with the Fedora Project or JBoss.org. Since the our mentoring organization was not accepted for the 2010 Google Summer of Code (GSoC), this page is now closed.

The Google program website is found here: http://socghop.appspot.com

You are a student

This section is for students interested in contributing to the Fedora Project or JBoss.org through the 2010 Google Summer of Code.

If you have an idea or want to participate through Fedora or JBoss.org, you should already be looking around the community and communicating.

Are you already working in the Fedora or JBoss communities?

Students who are users, participants, or contributors in the Fedora and JBoss communities are encouraged to participate in GSoC through Fedora/JBoss.

Do you have ideas for what you'd like to see in the project?

Are you working in an area of the project that might want to mentor you for your GSoC work? For example, if you write for the Fedora Documentation Project or translate for the Fedora Localization Project, talk with your group to see if there are ideas you can turn in to a student proposal, with another sub-project member as the mentor.

Do you have an idea you need a mentor for?

People can be most passionate about an idea that is their own. That passion can be what helps you get through the hard part of the project.

Do you know what person or sub-project in JBoss or Fedora that might be the mentoring group for your idea?

You need to do these two things:

  1. Contact the relevant sub-project for your idea or contact the discussion group. Be prepared to explain your idea, receive input and criticism, and grow (or reduce) the idea so it has the best chance of being accepted for the Summer of Code.
  2. Get your idea in to the GSoC proposal tool when it is open. Read their FAQ for more information.

Do you want to start from ideas mentors already have?

Mentors and sub-projects have put up sections on the Summer coding ideas for 2010 page. There you can find:

  • Full ideas that you might want to start on;
  • Suggestions and use cases, to help you make up your own idea;
  • Links to the sub-project/upstream where you can learn more.

For example, if you are interested in doing something for the RHQ Project, there is a link to an an ideas page on their website and how to contact the team. If you contact them, you can learn about even more ideas, and share some of your thinking.

Even if a mentor has an idea, you want to find one that inspires you. You must become part of the idea yourself.

You are a mentor

Are you committed to working with all parties?

You are an upstream

Has a student brought a project idea to you?

Do you have one or more ideas you want exposed to students?

Are you committed to working with all parties?

You want to help organize

Check out the Summer Coding SIG or the GSoC 2010 organization app.