On Tue, Sep 25, 2012 at 12:08 AM, Manu Gupta <manugupt1(a)opensuse.org> wrote:
Hey All,
On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 11:55 PM, Robert Schweikert <rjschwei(a)suse.com> wrote:
All,
Google s once again running the Google Code-In project that we as the
openSUSE project have participated in previously.
It would be great if someone can step up and drive the organization. Last
year Manu did a great job and we had a successful Code-In.
Thanks Robert, I have already started with wiki changes. Any help is
offcourse welcome, Once they are ready we can all start adding tasks
easily.
Also, Please note that
1. Rules have changed. This time we have no money involved which I
think is a positive thing from Google.
2. Only 10 organizations will be selected ( that means more competition for us )
I am still going through the rules, I hope to get it in place soon.
Below is the announcement:
Later,
Robert
Hello GSoC Mentors,
We are excited to announce [0] that we will be running the Google Code-in
[1] contest for 13-17 pre-university students again this fall. The contest
will begin for students on Monday, November 26th, 2012 [2].
Organizations will be able to apply to be one of the 10 mentoring
organizations beginning Monday, October 22nd (the Monday after the GSoC
Mentor Summit in Mountain View, CA). We will have a session on Google
Code-in during the Mentor Summit for people to learn more about the program
and for previous mentors and org admins to give us their feedback and
thoughts on the program.
When you read through the Contest Rules for this year you will notice some
major changes that we implemented based on your feedback and student
feedback from last year. The main points are below with more mentor
information on the GCI Wiki [3].
The point system has been overhauled and now every task is worth one
point. The 5 students with the highest number of completed tasks with your
org will be the pool from which you, the mentoring org, will choose your 2
Grand Prize winners based on the overall complete body of work of those 5
students.
There will be 10 Mentoring Orgs for a total of 20 Grand Prize Winners
(compared to 10 last year).
Translation tasks will no longer be a part of the Google Code-in
contest, either as its own category or as a part of documentation efforts.
If students want to go for the Grand Prize they will work predominantly
with one org and will hopefully become involved with the community of that
org and will stay long after the GCI contest is over.
Students will not earn cash prizes for their work. They will earn
certificates and t-shirts and then they can go for the grand prize if they
wish.
The contest was shortened by a week at the beginning of the contest
period so it will now start after the Thanksgiving holidays in the USA.
We hope you will help us spread the word about the Google Code-in contest so
we can introduce more young developers to the wonderful world of open
source. If you will be going to any talks or conferences aimed at
pre-university students in the next couple of months we would be happy to
send you some stickers for GCI. Please contact me directly at
sttaylor(a)google.com.
[0]
http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2012/09/google-code-in-contest-for-hi…
[1]
http://www.google-melange.com/gci/homepage/google/gci2012
[2]
http://www.google-melange.com/gci/events/google/gci2012
[3]
http://code.google.com/p/google-code-in/wiki/GCIMentorInformation2012
Best,
Stephanie Taylor
--
Robert Schweikert MAY THE SOURCE BE WITH YOU
SUSE-IBM Software Integration Center LINUX
Tech Lead
rjschwei(a)suse.com
rschweik(a)ca.ibm.com
781-464-8147
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Regards
Manu Gupta
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Regards
Manu Gupta
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