On Thu, Feb 20, 2014 at 3:24 PM, Martin Braun <[email protected]>wrote:
> On 02/20/2014 04:01 AM, YiZiRui Zhou wrote: > > Hi Martin, > > > > Thanks for your advice. > > > > Although it is not so clear, I have some elementary ideas on this > > project and I'm on it now. On the other hand, I will keep an eye on the > > GSoC 2014. Thus, I want to know is there any way to discuss these ideas > > with potential mentor(s)? How do I know if anyone is interested in it? > > Anyway, I'll go on with this project no matter whether it is accepted or > > not. Of course, If it could be involved in GSoC, that would be great. > > Nice to hear! > > DISCLAIMER: We have not been accepted (yet?) as mentoring org for GSoC. > This is all speculative! > > To clarify, our mentors are all volunteers, which means we can't assign > any mentor a project if he or she doesn't like it. This means that > project proposals might get declined, even if they're very good, simply > because we can't find a mentor. Also, not everyone can sign up as > mentor, which means that the mentor will always be limited. > > On the other side, I do not want to punish people like you, who are > being proactive and creative, which is a key feature we are looking for > in students. > > That said, we have never, ever been in the situation where we had to > decline a student because of the proposal content. Last year, the top 5 > proposals were all for projects that already had a mentor. A really > great proposal would probably be easy to sell to a mentor, because it > reduces the risk of having to micromanage a lot (read: we prefer good > proposals for new ideas rather than bad proposals for or own ideas). > > You're in a bit of a chicken-and-egg situation, here: You need a mentor > to discuss the proposal with, but you first need to get someone excited > enough to potentially be a mentor. > > Here's my suggestion: Read *all* there is on GSoC wiki pages on GNU > Radio, including old proposals (but don't follow them to the letter, > just use them as inspiration). Whip up something, and post it on the > list. You've already got something going for you: You're early. > > Now, as with all list traffic, there's no guarantee for you that someone > will help you. But sticking to list netiquette helps a lot. > > Martin > > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss-gnuradio mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio > Hi Martin, Thanks for your patient reply. Your words really inspire me. I am writing a block to implement MIMO transceiver based on "ofdm_rx" and "ofdm_tx" now, willing to build a MIMO WLAN with several USRPs. Basically, general MIMO encoding and decoding method will be included, some techniques like rate adaptation is also in consideration. But those ideas are not so complete now, next I will try to figure it out. As you said, posting the idea on the list is a good way to make it known to all, I will do that when everything is ready. Also, I will go through the GNU Radio GSoC wiki page, maybe there are some other good things I can do. I know that if there is no mentor to guide me, I would not be able to take part in the GSoC. But, maybe this is not the most important thing to me. There is no doubt that I can benefit a lot from working on the project and learning from the mailing list, these are the things that shine. Thank you again Zhou
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