Contents
This page is WIP. If everything's going right I (LasseSchuirmann) am reworking the email templates from last year until october or so.
1. Sent Emails
2. TODO
2.1. Early Call For Ideas
When: Directly after the announcement of the GSoC 2016 Why: It is better to give the mentors a bigger timeframe to come up and collect their ideas. Ideas just happen and one can expect to get better/more ideas when collecting them over a wider timeframe. Subject: GSoC 2016 Call For Ideas To: desktop-devel-list, soc-mentors-list CC: soc-admins Dear GNOME hackers, Google has just announced the Google Summer of Code 2016. TODO
2.2. Late Call For Ideas
2.3. After requesting slots
When: After requesting slots Why: Make sure mentors have marked the right proposals as wanted to mentor and that they score the student. Subject: To GSoC mentors: Steps to follow to get the proposals in the accepted slots To: desktop-devel-list, soc-mentors-list CC: soc-admins Dear GSoC Mentors, We have requested slots for GNOME and in a few days we will be able to finally accept or decline proposals. In order to get the students you want in the accepted slots, you need to do the following: - Make sure you have marked all proposals you'd like to accept as "want to mentor". If you have two proposals for the same project, you need to decide which one to take. - Include a score (explanation of score below*) and any comments about your experience mentoring the applicant and how strongly you feel that they should be accepted for the program. Do this in the comments section of the proposal on the Google's website. - In case you selected to mentor more than one student, send us an email at soc-admins@gnome.org confirming it. Please make sure you will have enough time for two students. It's expected to spend around 10 hours per week per student. Google started to strongly recommend to just accept a single student per mentor, so we need to be careful when accepting these exceptions. It is important to do these steps soon - the sooner this is done, the more likely you get the students you want! *Score scale, half point rankings (i.e. 4.5, 3.5) are ok: 5 = amazing applicant, could become a module maintainer on completing the program, made extensive contributions to GNOME of high quality 4 = strong applicant, will certainly do a good job, made substantial contributions to GNOME of high quality (> ~50 lines of code or equivalent) 3 = good applicant, but is somewhat inexperienced 2 = is unlikely to do a good job 1 = not a good candidate Also remember that when mentoring in GSoC, we expect: - Fill evaluations at least 3 days before the official Google deadline. We need some time to tie up loose ends. Your student will fail if the evaluation is not filled on time. - Spend around 10h per week with the student; reviewing code, helping him/her, chatting, etc. - Review code submissions of the student thoroughly and in a timely manner. - Communicate regularly with the student. Weekly meetings are recommended on top of regular communication. - The student is on planet.gnome.org before the end of the community bonding phase. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to send us an email to soc-admins@gnome.org or contact one of us on IRC. Best regards, GSoC Admins
2.4. Welcoming accepted students
Dear GNOME-loving student, Congratulations: you did it! The GNOME community is glad to welcome you, and to have you participate in Google Summer of Code and work on GNOME! Some of you already know the GNOME community quite well, but it might not be the case for every one of you. That's not a problem: GSoC has a community bonding time, where you will have a few weeks to get to know the community before starting the real work. That's a really good thing, and we hope you'll be able to see how great, friendly and helpful the GNOME community is! The first thing we want you to do is to contact your mentor. Write her or him a nice mail or buy her/him a beer (or some juice) if you happen to live in the same city :-). If during the GSoC, you have a problem with your mentor (lack of communication, or misunderstandings, or deep disagreements, or anything else), don't hesitate to report that to the GNOME administrators (listed on https://wiki.gnome.org/Outreach/SummerOfCode/2016/ ): they'll be there to help with this kind of things and their goal is to make sure that you feel good, so they will work hard to fix any issue with your mentor. But hopefully, this won't be needed: all mentors and administrators are nice people (or at least, they're supposed to be ;-)). We have subscribed you to our mailing list for the Summer of Code: http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-soc-list This is the list where mails will be sent when we need to reach all of you. Feel free to use this list for discussion between all mentored students, or to ask questions about GNOME, or about the community or about anything you need. To begin things, it would be great if you send to this list an introduction mail so that the whole community knows about you, your project, your plans, etc. You can then use your introduction mail to fill the wiki page for your GSoC project. First, add a link to it from a page that lists all projects, then create a wiki page for your individual project. https://wiki.gnome.org/Outreach/SummerOfCode/2016/Projects This is a good place to introduce your project, link to the blog posts you'll write, link to your code, etc. See the wiki pages from last year if you need some examples: https://wiki.gnome.org/Outreach/SummerOfCode/2015/Projects Feel free to edit other pages of the GNOME wiki too. This is where we post the information relevant to the GNOME projects. From time to time, you might like to look through the recent changes page to see what's going on in GNOME. https://wiki.gnome.org/RecentChanges Planet GNOME is an aggregator of blogs of GNOME contributors. From now on, it will serve as your morning newspaper :-). We ask that you add your blog to Planet GNOME, creating a new blog if necessary, and write updates about your work during the internship period every two weeks. Of course, you are welcome to blog more often too! It is exciting that you will have a voice on Planet GNOME right from the start and it is a very important way to let the GNOME community know about the work you are doing! This will also allow us to keep track of your progress. Once your blog is added, please write an introductory post and start blogging about your work on GNOME and other things that you see relevant for Planet GNOME. http://planet.gnome.org Here is what you need to do to get yourself added to Planet GNOME. You need to have a link to your blog or to a category of posts in your blog AND a hackergotchi ready for that. This page has all the details: http://wiki.gnome.org/PlanetGnome In particular, see "Do I have to only blog about GNOME things?" section which explains that it's great to have posts about other things that interest you aggregated on Planet GNOME, as long as they can be of interest to other people in the community. So you should decide whether you want to add your full blog or just a category based on how frequently you blog and the range of topics you blog about. Once you have the hackergotchi and the blog feed ready, file a bug with them. Include your IRC nick as well. Be sure to use the right Bugzilla product ('website') and component ('planet.gnome.org') for your bug. https://bugzilla.gnome.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=website&component=planet.gnome.org Mention that you are a GSoC student in the bug. That will get your blog added fast even if it is completely new and will waive the requirement of being the GNOME Foundation member. You will get a special GSoC logo next to your posts on Planet GNOME. Other mailing lists that might be of interest to you are the desktop-devel-list and the gnome-love list: https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-love You can participate in the general discussion on the desktop-devel-list, and ask questions if you have problems with building GNOME, or if you're not sure how to do something on gnome-love list. You should also subscribe to the mailing list relevant to your project. You should join #gnome-hackers, #gnome-love, and #soc IRC channels on GIMPNet (irc.gnome.org), as well as the channels relevant to your project and other channels that might be of interest to you. It's fine to just lurk on IRC. IRC is where people talk in GNOME, and it is a great way to learn and discuss things. See this page for more information: https://wiki.gnome.org/Community/GettingInTouch/IRC If you prefer to use an address different from your gmail (or google account) address to communicate, please tell the administrators. All students are invited to attend GUADEC, taking place in Karlsruhe, Germany on August 12-14 as core conference days. In addition to attending a conference and meeting GNOME hackers from around the world, you will have an opportunity to present your work during interns' lightning talks and possibly spend a few additional days working with your mentor and project team. Please talk to your mentor about setting up a hackfest, a BoF (Birds of a Feather discussion), or a time to co-work on your project in the days adjacent to the core conference days. If needed, students can receive partial financial assistance for attending GUADEC. We will let you know when GNOME's travel committee is ready to receive applications for financial assistance for GUADEC travel. If your school starts before August 30, and you have vacation time between now and May 23, we would like to encourage you to start on your projects early. That's all for now. If you have any questions, feel free to send a mail to the administrators or the mailing lists, or ask your mentor. Small summary: + make sure you're in contact with your mentor(s) + create the wiki page for your project + get your blog added to Planet GNOME + subscribe to relevant mailing lists + hang out on IRC + introduce yourself on gnome-soc-list and on Planet GNOME + save the date: August 12-14 at least + start early if you will be busy with school towards the end Welcome and Congratulations! Cheers, GNOME GSoC Administrators
3. Midterm evaluations approaching
Subject: GSoC Midterm Evaluations due by June 24th Dear mentors, GSoC midterm evaluations are due soon. Please fill them out by end-of-day (UTC) on June 24th, so that we don't need to be tracking down you and/or your student. You can start filling them since 20th of June. This year evaluations can not be edited, so please revise the evaluation before. Please let us know: - if you have any concerns about your student. - if you need any assistance filling the evaluations. You can reach us through soc-admins@gnome.org. Thanks, The GNOME GSoC Admin Team