Really great news !! Congratulation !
Let's work on ! On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 12:41 AM, Daniel Willmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, > > I'm happy to announce the final Google Summer of Code slot allocation > for Openmoko. 10 projects will be funded this year which is quite an > improvement over the 3 we had in 2007. Lets make it rock. :-) > > So here are the projects that we will take on during this years Summer > of Code: > > OpenMoko Mail > Student: Vladimir Mihaylov > Mentor: Thomas Wood > > Flexible answering machine > Student: Frederik Sdun > Mentor: Thomas Wood > > IM/VoIP using telepathy > Student: Deniz Koçak > Mentor: Robert McQueen > > Accelerometer Gestures > Student: Paul-Valentin Borza > Mentor: Daniel Willmann > > Implementation of a OpenMoko remote controller for GNU/Linux > Student: Valério Domingos Valério > Mentor: Daniel Willmann > > speech recognition facility in open moko > Student: Saurabh Gupta > Mentor: Luis G. Lira > > A "targeted" SELinux Policy For OpenMoko > Student: Willis Vandevanter > Mentor: Stefan Schmidt > > SMS middleware > Student: Patryk Szymczak > Mentor: Michael Lauer > > odeviced: Open Device Daemon for FreeRunner/Neo1973 complying with > freesmartphone.org specs > Student: Sudharshan S > Mentor: Michael Lauer > > PIM storage for the mobile world > Student: Sören Apel > Mentor: m. dietrich > > Please make the students feel welcome in our community and help them > with any questions they have. > > If you applied this year but didn't get accepted don't despair. Openmoko > welcomes your contribution, whether made through GSoC or not and > through the "Community member of the month" contest you can even win a > t-shirt. It's all about the t-shirts. :-) > Finally, if there will be a Google Summer of Code next year we will try > to get accepted as mentoring organization again. > > All students are free to choose the way they want to handle the > development, if you have no strong preference we would recommend > creating a project at projects.openmoko.org. However, we do require > that every project has a website of some sorts with current status > information (this can be the projects.om.org Site, it could be a > special category in your blog, it might even be a plaintext file edited > in $EDITOR and synced to a webserver). Important is that there's some > place where interested people can go to and get an overview over your > project. General development discussion should take place on a public > mailing list, preferably [EMAIL PROTECTED] You can > sign up for mailing lists at http://lists.openmoko.org/ > Also the IRC room #openmoko-gsoc on Freenode is available for mentors > and students to discuss their project. This room is of course open to > the general public. > > A good place to start looking for documentation is the Openmoko wiki at > http://wiki.openmoko.org/ > > An overview page with links to the individual projects pages will be > available at > http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Summer_of_Code_2008#Current_projects once > everything is set up. > > Regards, > Daniel Willmann > -- Steven Le Roux Jabber-ID : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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