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Google Summer of Code 2008

Got an Open Source or Free software project? Want some young, eager college developers to give you a boost? Then you should check out the Google Summer of Code. The details:

Over the coming months we'll be working with open source and free software groups to select hundreds of student projects from thousands of applications. Then, during the summer, we'll distribute millions of dollars in stipends to the students cranking out the code. Our goal is to increase the world's supply of open source software while providing young programmers inspiring, meaningful summer jobs.

Since the first Google Summer of Code in 2005, the program has had remarkable success. Last year we connected 900 students with more than 130 open source mentoring groups, including such prominent organizations as Dojo, Python, Samba and Ubuntu. Several past students are still contributing to their projects and many are serving as mentors in this year's program. Meanwhile, similar programs are springing up all over, including the Finnish Summer Code Program, the GNOME Women's Summer Outreach Program, the Season of Usability, and game publisher NCSoft's Winter of Code.

This year's Google Summer of Code promises to be the most successful we've ever held. We've extended the program timeline to allow students and mentors to discuss applications before settling in to write them, and we're continuing last year's tradition of announcing accepted applicants early to allow students more time to bond with their project communities.

We look forward to applications from organizations and students eager to participate.  Applications for organizations open March 3 and close March 12; for students, applications open March 24 and close March 31.  Coding will run from May 26 through August 18.

Note the appropriate use of the semicolon in the second-to-last sentence. ;-) We're thinking of gettin us one of them thar summer of code students for one of our own Open Source projects: RSH.

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Comments: 1 so far

  1. Hey, you stole my idea! (kidding).

    I was thinking about doing the same exact thing for dsHistory as the number of ideas / features I’d like to implement seems to be inversely proportional to the time I have to work on it.

    Comment by Andrew Mattie, Thursday, February 28, 2008 @ 1:10 pm

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