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Monday 26 May 2008

Release Team Changes

I'm totally late at announcing this, but well, it's never too late, is it? Our GNOME project hero, window management guru and former release manager Elijah left the release team after the GNOME 2.22.0 release. Everybody knows he's been a key member in the release team in the past few years, so we'll just pretend he was useless and we wanted to get rid of him (that's obviously not true and we miss him a lot, but it's easier to pretend we don't miss him ;-))

And since the release team people are all lazy people, we couldn't stay with a missing member. So the fantastic Lucas has joined us. The cool thing is that we can now delegate all the tasks to him and pretend that it's normal work he should do. I've heard from good sources that Lucas loves to do all the boring tasks anyway :-) Lucas, I'll buy you drinks in Istanbul!

Lies!

Dear Christian,

Please don't spread false rumors. Ice cream Deathmatches are the ultimate experience and wouldn't exist without confidence of all involved parties, which means that only truth can be told. And I shall reveal the truth. Andre and I first tried to organize a deathmatch on one of the early evenings, but we couldn't find any zmrzlina. Then, on a later evening, which you witnessed, Andre gave up because he had drunk too many beers -- he's not that solid after all. But it doesn't matter since GUADEC will most probably see the biggest Ice cream Deathmatch of all times.

Love,

Vincent

--

And hopefully, I'll be able to post something later today about my highlights of this week in Prague.

Wednesday 16 April 2008

Decision time for the Summer of Code

I wanted to post this announce on Monday, but got busy with other things... But it's not too late: in a bit less than 6 hours (at 19:00 UTC), a small team of GNOME mentors for the Google Summer of Code will meet and work hard to select the projects that we'll mentor this year. I guess that, like for all previous years, people will fight hard for their favorite projects ;-) It's generally not easy, since there are some really interesting projects that we might need to reject. If you want to participate to this meeting and you don't know where it will occur (which means you're not subscribed to soc-mentors-list!), ping me on IRC.

I took nearly all my Monday afternoon to browse again most of the applications. I could at least identify one thing that we did bad this year: there are applications related to many GNOME modules, and for some of those applications, no maintainer of the relevant module commented or even took a look. I tried to ping (or to have someone else ping) those maintainers to get their opinion about the project, so all in all, we should be fine, but that will be something to keep in mind for next year, I guess. Also, we received quite less applications than last year -- I guess this can be explained by the fact that some projects like Gnumeric or GStreamer are now directly participating to GSoC. However, the good news is that I have the feeling we have around the same number of good applications.

Can't wait the meeting to at last know what projects we'll be able to watch during the summer :-)

Friday 11 April 2008

Lesson of the day

Do not assume that gsize and unsigned int are the same thing. If you look too quickly at the doc, you might think it's true. But the text that you didn't read because you didn't take ten seconds for this is clear about it and you might end up with some bad bug.

Wednesday 26 March 2008

About this Summer of Code thing...

There are some events that make you quite happy. On Monday, I pinged my favorite brazilian hacker to start triaging our list of project ideas for the Google Summer of Code. I didn't want to do this alone, and it was time to do it since the student application period was about to start. Lucas then appeared on IRC. But we were not only two: Adam, Daniel (who is really German, don't listen to him trying to argue that he's not), Marco and Sandy decided to step up and join the discussion. The amazing thing is that all this process was quite long (something like four hours) but everybody took the time to contribute. That's cool. Really cool.

Since I'm talking about GSoC, I might as well go on and try to get more people involved as mentors :-) Everybody potentially willing to mentor for GNOME should register in the web application as soon as possible, since we're already receiving some applications. And we need to start looking at them and discussing with students now. Also, make sure to subscribe to the soc-mentors-list mailing list, since this is the private place where mentors and administrators can talk about proposals, students, problems, good things, etc. If you're interested in being part of the small team (around 10 people) that will have the last word about which applications we accept, make sure to contact Behdad, Christian, Lucas or me. The easiest way is probably to send a mail to soc-mentors-list.

Oh, maybe some students are also reading this blog? Well, now it's time for you to apply. Go read the small documentation that Clare and Marco (who participated to WSOP and GSoC in the past) wrote. You can also look at those notes from Buddhika who also was a GSoC student. I'm sure every student can find a project he wants to work on. There are so many mentoring organizations that I can't imagine that someone will fail to find something of interest to him. There's GNOME, of course, but if you're interested in GNOME, you might also be interested in Abiword, cairo, the GIMP, Gnumeric, GStreamer, Inkscape or X.org. But that's not all, I'm sure there will be some cool projects being mentored by vim, the XMPP Foundation, or our friends at KDE. Also check out the openSUSE ideas! Woo, maybe there are too many good projects? :-)

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by Vincent