Aanand Shekhar Roy writes: > I am extremely sorry for behaving stupidly.
You're not stupid, and your behavior is not stupid, unless you fail to learn from it. You are just being too focused on what you want to do, and not listening carefully enough to the people who actually set the requirements. (And it's not the people ask if they would like the feature, although they do matter.) That's where GSoC is most valuable. In school, unless you are lucky, your teachers are too busy with many students, and they either give you an assignment that is like a test, that has a "right" answer (and then your job is very simple: find it!), or they give you a very open assignment and you can do what you like, as long as it works. GSoC doesn't work that way. It's far more like the real world -- in fact, it *is* the real world of volunteer projects. You need to address a problem that the people who are deciding who to mentor want solved. Note that the list of such problems is *very* long, in fact, and a lot of them we don't know about yet. There's plenty of room for your ideas and creativity. The harder constraint is finding something that takes about one summer to do. The problems you're looking at so far don't seem to hit that sweet spot as far as I can see. Maybe another mentor will have a different opinion. However, we're overwhelmed with the response this year (and I'm also likely to be asked to evaluate proposals and possibly mentor for Systers, as a Mailman branch is a central part of their infrastructure). _______________________________________________ Mailman-Developers mailing list Mailman-Developers@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-developers Mailman FAQ: http://wiki.list.org/x/AgA3 Searchable Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/mailman-developers%40python.org/ Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/mailman-developers/archive%40jab.org Security Policy: http://wiki.list.org/x/QIA9