On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 11:18 AM Deepanshu97 <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>
> On Sunday, 9 September 2018 23:00, Vagrant Cascadian <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>
> > My limited understanding was that GSoC is mostly about learning and
> > exploring, and not necessarily about delivering "perfect" working code,
> > though obviously quality code is a desirable outcome.
> >
> > For whatever it's worth, I very much appreciated how you engaged with
> > the LTSP community when trying to resolve technical issues; that is one
> > of the most important things in a healthy free software project,
> > development doesn't work well in isolation.
>
>
> Thank you vagrant and scott for appreciating the work. :)
> Yes you are right GSoC is not about delivering "extremely perfect" code
> But about interacting with the community and contributing to open source
> projects.
>
> I was going results from google about the students that failed at GSoC. I
> found this mail:
> https://mail.python.org/pipermail/gsoc-mentors/2016/000048.html
>
> In this, I read that the organization fails the student in very extreme
> cases. Example student disappears, produces no code at all, etc. This was
> not in my case. I interacted with the mentors daily, submitted reports on
> time, wrote blogs every week, made commits every day. One can have a look
> at my final report:
> https://gist.github.com/d78ui98/138c986dffc4d7a094e3ec1c63b545ba
>
>  This is why I dont think I deserve to get failed.
>
> Also the mentor dashamir did not follow some guidelines like communicating
> with the admins before failing as mentioned in the official guideline by
> GSoC:
>
> https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/help/responsibilities#mentor_responsibilities
>
> I informed him about this. He replied very rudely. He said "GSoC is over,
> what do you want? Next time you can try to select a better mentor."
>

I think that you are trying to use out of the context what people said, and
this is not good.
You "informed" me about that on Aug 28, and at that time GSoC was really
over.
We had already discussed technical issues and problems and your failures
before.
You cannot keep bugging me all the time because of your frustrations and
grievances.
So the question still is: what do you really want? What do you expect to
achieve by this discussion?

I don't think mentors should talk to their students like this. I informed
> about this to Google as well. They still think that it was organizations
> decision to fail a student and that's why they are not properly taking a
> look at the final evaluation result.
>
> I did get a lot of technical and social experience from GSoC. But putting
> in lot of work and then failing is bothering me. I cannot even say in my
> resume that I was a GSoC student at Debian. The project has been removed
> from GSoC completely.
>

In case that you have forgotten, let me remind you what I wrote to you
after the first evaluation:

"Deepanshu, I passed you for the first evaluation because you are a nice
guy and I think that you have tried hard to do your best. However you have
not been able to finish properly the requirements of the first evaluation,
even with so much help from me (and Akash), and even a week later. Honestly
I think that your programming and algorithmic thinking skills are not yet
mature enough and no matter how much time available you have, you still
will not be able to complete them properly. The same goes for the
objectives of the second evaluation. Porting Ubuntu packages to Debian
maybe is not so difficult, but adding support for RaspberryPi clients can
be too difficult for you (judging from what you have done so far).

So, I think that you will not be able to pass the second evaluation. If you
have something better to do during the summer, you can stop working on this
project and withdraw. You will still get the payment for the first month. I
don't want to discourage you, but I don't want you to get disappointing
either (working hard for a month and then failing). However if you still
want to give it a try, no matter if you fail in the end, you are more than
welcome. I would be happy if you prove me wrong and finish all the tasks
properly."

I was not sure weather to pass or fail you on the first evaluation, but the
advice from
Debian admins was that I should not fail you without giving you a warning,
and I found this
reasonable.
You decided to continue and I think that it was a good decision. But now
you should not
pretend that you put a lot of work and you are bothered that you failed.
Working hard
is a requirement, but is not a guaranty for success. I would have preferred
that you
succeeded, but you couldn't. Also, being a nice guy is not enough to
succeed (although
I am not sure about that anymore).


>
> I am not sure what should I do here.
>

Life has failures as well, not only successes. If you listen to my advice,
you should accept the failures with dignity and try to do better next time.


>
> regards
> deepanshu
>
>

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