nus briefing on google summer of code ( gsoc ) 2011

36

Upload: savea

Post on 25-Feb-2016

35 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011. What is GSoC ?. It is a sponsored project to inspire students to take part in open source software ( OSS ) development. What you get:. A US$ 5000 stipend. An awesome t-shirt. Certificate from Google. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011
Page 2: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

It is a sponsored project to inspire students to take part in open source software (OSS) development.

2

Page 3: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

A US$ 5000 stipend. An awesome t-shirt. Certificate from Google. Valuable exposure to real world software

development scenarios. Flexible work hours. Option to get 6MC under CP3200 (for SoC

students)What you have to do: What you have to do: Spend your summer coding for an OSS project

3

Page 4: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

1. Google selects about 150 OSS projects as mentoring organizations (let’s call them MOs).

2. Students submit applications. You can submit up to 20 applications.

3. MOs rank applications.4. Google selects around 1000 students

based MO rankings. 5. MO assigns 1-2 mentors to each student

to provide guidance.

4

Page 5: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

6. Student gets familiarize with the MO.7. Student start coding; gets paid $500 right

away.8. Student submit mid-term progress

evaluations; gets paid $2250.9. Student finish coding and submit final

evaluations; gets paid another $2250, receive the T-shirt and the certificate from Google.

5

Page 6: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

6

Not much time left!

Page 7: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

7

Full timeline is available at GSoC’11 FAQ

Page 8: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Close to a full time job (so is the pay!). But, flexible hours.

Can work from anywhere in the world.

Can still enjoy the summer vacation.

8

Page 9: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

You must be 18 years of age or older by April 26, 2011.

Enrolled in a college as at April 26, 2010. oUndergrad, postgrad, part-time, full-time all OK

Not from Iran, Syria, Cuba, Sudan, North Korea and Myanmar (Burma). {Google, being a US company, is not allowed to trade with above countries}

9

Page 10: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Yes, if you have …◦Reasonable programming skills (any

language).◦Willingness to learn as you go.

No need to be expert coders yourself! GSoC is meant for students like you. You will get guidance from expert

programmers (and even famous ones) during the project.

10

Page 11: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Not really. GSoC 09 acceptance rate for NUS students is high.

NUS students have a higher chancethan an average applicant:

Better English than applicant from some countries Better infrastructure (broadband connections etc.)

and we can help you when you apply!

11

Page 12: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

No catch; but it is not as simple as sending a resume to Google.

They want to see evidence of your commitment before they commit to give you $5000.

12

Page 13: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

By submitting a detailed application that describes:

you:◦Why do you think you are suitable for this

project?

your proposal: ◦How do you propose to contribute to the

project? ◦What do you plan to deliver at what points?

13

This part is very important!

Page 14: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

That’s the spirit . But note that preparing a good application can take at least 1-2 weeks of work.{GSoC is not a Lotto or a 4D hit-and-miss. If

you are serious and willing to invest time, you have a high chance of success}

14

Page 15: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Join the NUSGSoC Google group. http://groups.google.com/group/nusgsoc

We use it to share resources among GSoC applicants from NUS.

It includes past NUS GSoC’ers willing to help you.

15

Page 16: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Visit GSoC official website at http://socghop.appspot.com/

Read all important information about the program. Especially, the FAQ

16

Page 17: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Join ‘official’ GSoC discussion group (in addition to NUSGSoC group). http://groups.google.com/group/google-summer-of-code-discuss

17

Page 18: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Do not post “I’m new and totally clueless, please help me!” type messages. Here’s an example (it’s an actual email posted in GSoC discussion group, names changed):

My Name is Stupid Student. I live in Lazy Land. This is the First time I heard of GSoC. I want help about joining GSoC. So, please anybody help me giving me guidance in joining a mentor which requires a java coder for their project and you can contact me through my mail and my mail id is [email protected] would be so thankful if u help me...

18

Page 19: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

In particular, search archive and read available docs before asking a question

19

Huh? Who the heck do you think you are?

Page 20: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Posts like those two examples can totally blow your chances of getting selected!

Why? If you are good enough to do GSoC, you should care enough to read all the information available before asking questions. {and most information you need are already available if you care enough to look for them}

There are no ‘stupid questions’, but there certainly are ‘lazy questions’.

20

Page 21: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Select from the list published by Google

21

These are project ideas proposed by the MO. You can propose to follow one of those ideas or propose you own idea

Page 22: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Do not post messages such as the below:

I know Java/C++, and has experience in XYZ. Any project interested in taking me?

YOU study the projects and choose the ones YOU like; don’t ask projects to choose you.

22

Page 23: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Do not plan to send your CVs to 20 MOs with a generic note “I like to work for you. Please take me”.

Each application needs to be tailored to the MO you apply for.

Each application needs quite a bit of homework and investment of your time.

23

Page 24: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

2011 MO list is not out yet. But 2010 list is. Most of those will make it to this year’s list

as well.

Have a look at the 2010 list and start studying potential projects ASAP. {Why study them? You need to know some things about the project before you can apply to it}

24

Page 25: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Initial filtering: You can filter some out by their programming

language preference. E.g., If you are a Java guy, look for Java projects.

Avoid MOs that produce something you cannot relate to at all. E.g., If you have no clue about operating systems, don’t apply for OS projects.

Some of you might want to avoid popular MOs (to avoid too much competition) while others may not mind a challenge.

25

Page 26: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Check out their mailing lists and IRC channels (most projects use IRC to communicate).◦ Introduce yourself as a potential GSoC applicant.◦ Ask whether they are likely to be in this year’s list.

If possible, check time zone compatibility with potential mentors.

26

Page 27: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Spend some time idling in MO IRC channel and read their mailing list to get a feel of the community.◦ Observe what’s going on.◦ See how questions get answered (or not get

answered).◦ See how the bug list is being handled.

See if they are the kind of people you want to work with.

27

Page 28: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

You need to gain at least some understanding about the project before you apply.◦ Read introductory docs about the code.◦ Take a prelim look at the code.◦ Take a look at the tools they use.

See if the project has enough documentation to help a beginner like you.

See if you can get at least some sense of the ideas being proposed (in the idea list).

28

Page 29: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Unit testing frameworks such as JUnit Versioning tools such as SVN, Git,

Mercurial Refactoring Design patterns Issue tracking tools such as Bugzilla

At least know what these are, even if you do not know them in depth. {Post in NUSGSoC if you need help with these…}

29

Page 30: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Promote yourself in your application.◦ Show enthusiasm.◦ Show commitment.◦ Show your knowledge and interest in the project.◦ Give external links (cv, blog, home page, …).

Promote your project idea. Describe it clearly.

Promise deliverables at various points.◦ In particular, promise to deliver working code in

increments.

30

Page 31: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Do not oversell yourself. Do not promise things you cannot deliver. Do not pretend to know things you don’t. …

Remember, your application will be evaluated by expert techies, not HR managers.

If you bluff, you will be found out.

31

Page 32: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Do not copy-paste from their own idea description into your application.◦ At least say it in your own words.

The same person who wrote that stuff will be reading your proposal.

32

Page 33: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Any freelancing work? Any past work on OSS projects?

Don’t forget the projects you did in school (CS2103, CS3214, CS3215, CS3216, FYP, …)

33

Page 34: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

First, you can get your application reviewed by someone here.◦ From Dr. Damith ([email protected]).◦ From your friends or other lecturers.

Then, you can get it reviewed by a potential mentor.◦ Don’t push. Just ask politely if they can give some

feedback.

Don’t ask for feedback one day before the deadline.

34

Page 35: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

Important! Join … http://groups.google.com/group/nusgsoc

… to receive more info/help from us.

35

Checkout the “Useful links” page

too

Page 36: NUS Briefing on Google Summer of Code ( GSoC ) 2011

http://groups.google.com/group/nusgsoc

36

My contact details:Dr. Damith C. [email protected]://damith.info