Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-14 Thread Rui Carmo
I'd love to see someone tackle a NetBeans plugin (see parallel thread in 
which I point out non-existent alternatives and point out that it supports 
Scala well -- something we should address if we're to expand mindshare).

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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-14 Thread Jony Hudson
@Chris

 thanks :-) Nothing public yet, I've got a few odds and ends I'd like to 
tie up first. Am looking to get it up on Github next week, or early the 
week after, and will be sure to post a message to the list once it's there 
:-)


Jony


On Thursday, 13 February 2014 23:53:59 UTC, Christopher Small wrote:

 @Jony

 This is very exciting. Is this on github or somewhere else public? Would 
 love to take a look at what you are doing. The snapshot looks awesome :-)

 Chris


 On Thursday, February 13, 2014 12:15:11 PM UTC-8, Jony Hudson wrote:

 Hi,

  I'm a bit late to the party here (and very new to the party - this being 
 my first post to the group) but maybe this of interest:

  I've been working on number 1 and sort of number 2 since the start of 
 the year, and have something pretty solid working now. It's a browser based 
 REPL, in the notebook style with nice javascript-based visualisation. In 
 fact, I said it better in the README that I was writing this morning:

 You can think of it like a pretty REPL that can plot graphs, or you can 
 think of it as an editor for rich documents that
 can contain interactive Clojure code, graphs, table, notes, LaTeX 
 formulae. Whatever works for you! One of the main
 aims is to make it lightweight enough that you can use it day-to-day 
 instead of the command-line REPL, but also offer
 the power to perform and document complex data analysis and modelling 
 tasks. Above all else, Gorilla tries not to
 dictate your workflow, but rather to fit in to the way you like to work, 
 hopefully putting a bit more power to your
 elbow.

 It's got some features that I think are pretty neat: visualisations as 
 values, notebook files are also plain clojure files, very lightweight 
 interface (it's no iPython!). I was planning to get an initial release out 
 next week or the week after. (BTW, I should note that the client side is 
 written in javascript, not clojurescript - as it evolved from an earlier 
 javascript project). Screenshot of extremely hastily put together example, 
 attached! I haven't done much in the way of Incanter integration, but it's 
 planned (and should work really well I think).

 I appreciate it's hard to judge, given that you haven't seen anything of 
 it yet, but I'd be very happy if it was interest for the submission. And 
 I'm in the position and hopefully have the skills to help mentor someone 
 (being an academic) if that's of use. And I'd be really very happy to do it.

 Anyway, like I say, I appreciate that I'm unknown here, and talking about 
 a project that no-one has seen yet, at the last minute (!) but it seemed 
 like it would be silly not to mention what I'm up to :-) I'm happy to write 
 up a few words for the wiki in the format above if anyone thinks it's a 
 good idea.

 Yours,


 Jony


 https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-Ry_XuBKpUf8/Uv0nZ1nJRcI/D1Q/YEjTqHj5vlk/s1600/Screen+Shot+2014-02-13+at+20.12.17.png
  

 On Thursday, 13 February 2014 18:31:18 UTC, A wrote:


 I think this is a great discussion, and there are myriad ways to get 
 there. I haven't settled my own opinions firmly enough to advocate for one 
 implementation over another at this point, but I do think that Incanter 
 could become a killer toolbox (even more than now) with the additon of...:


 1. a literate programming Notebook solution - inspiring repeatable 
 analysis, to communicate or publish methods and results).  Perhaps RStudio (
 http://www.rstudio.com/ide/), Light Table, and Emacs should be 
 metaphors for the shape this could take.  A stretch goal might be something 
 like Mathematica if this is even possible.

 2. a Clojurescript visualization layer to make use of the amazing 
 visualization currently in the javascript world.

 Perhaps these two things can effectively unify and become one via Light 
 Table or Browser repl.


 A last idea is the integration of Incanter analysis with Pallet (
 https://github.com/pallet/pallet , http://palletops.com/) to spawn 
 compute servers as necessary (perhaps GPU, perhaps cascalog/hadoop, or 
 vowpal wabbit / hadoop, etc.. )



 Best regards,
 Avram





 On Tuesday, February 11, 2014 4:44:54 PM UTC-8, Mikera wrote:

 On the idea of a workbench / clojurescript integration, I always liked 
 the idea of a Light Table based analytical workbench that could connect to 
 a Clojure-based Incanter server (which might of course be running all the 
 heavy computations on a core.matrix GPU backend..)

 I don't know enough ClojureScript to be able to mentor such a project, 
 but happy to add it as an idea. should be feasible for a smart GSoC 
 student 

 On Saturday, 8 February 2014 07:02:52 UTC+8, A wrote:


 A couple ideas put forth:

 1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated 
 by Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).

 2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.

 Thoughts?

 -Avram




 On Monday, February 3, 2014 11:59:24 AM UTC-8, Daniel 

Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-13 Thread A

I think this is a great discussion, and there are myriad ways to get there. 
I haven't settled my own opinions firmly enough to advocate for one 
implementation over another at this point, but I do think that Incanter 
could become a killer toolbox (even more than now) with the additon of...:


1. a literate programming Notebook solution - inspiring repeatable 
analysis, to communicate or publish methods and results).  Perhaps RStudio 
(http://www.rstudio.com/ide/), Light Table, and Emacs should be metaphors 
for the shape this could take.  A stretch goal might be something like 
Mathematica if this is even possible.

2. a Clojurescript visualization layer to make use of the amazing 
visualization currently in the javascript world.

Perhaps these two things can effectively unify and become one via Light 
Table or Browser repl.


A last idea is the integration of Incanter analysis with Pallet 
(https://github.com/pallet/pallet , http://palletops.com/) to spawn compute 
servers as necessary (perhaps GPU, perhaps cascalog/hadoop, or vowpal 
wabbit / hadoop, etc.. )



Best regards,
Avram





On Tuesday, February 11, 2014 4:44:54 PM UTC-8, Mikera wrote:

 On the idea of a workbench / clojurescript integration, I always liked the 
 idea of a Light Table based analytical workbench that could connect to a 
 Clojure-based Incanter server (which might of course be running all the 
 heavy computations on a core.matrix GPU backend..)

 I don't know enough ClojureScript to be able to mentor such a project, but 
 happy to add it as an idea. should be feasible for a smart GSoC student 

 On Saturday, 8 February 2014 07:02:52 UTC+8, A wrote:


 A couple ideas put forth:

 1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated by 
 Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).

 2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.

 Thoughts?

 -Avram




 On Monday, February 3, 2014 11:59:24 AM UTC-8, Daniel Solano Gómez wrote:

 Hello, all, 

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google 
 Summer of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been 
 several notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, 
 last year's successful projects included: 

 * Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev 
 * core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant 
 * Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa 
 * Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in 
 Clojure, Dmitry Groshev 
 * Algebraic Expressions, Maik Schünemann 
 * ClojureScript optimization and source maps support, Michal Marczyk 

 I would love to see Clojure participate again this year.  In order to do 
 so, we need to start our application which is due in less than two weeks. 
  We need volunteers to help prepare our application, and in particular it 
 would be great to have administrators that can help lead the process.  I am 
 certainly willing to help out, but if there is someone who wants to lead up 
 this effort, I would happy to assist. 

 Ideally, we could have multiple administrators to spread out the 
 following duties: 

 * Updating the community wiki for the year [2] 
 * Recruiting potential mentors 
 * Raising the profile of GSoC within the community 

 If we are accepted as a GSoC organisation, administrator duties include: 

 * Ensuring we meet the deadlines 
 * Arranging for travel to the mentor submit 
 * Arranging for students' travel to conferences 
 * If necessary, solve problems 

 I am afraid that last year I let the ball drop a bit with the mentor 
 summit and getting students to conferences.  With multiple administrators 
 to help spread the work around, I am sure we can make GSoC an even better 
 experience for everyone involved. 

 If you are interested in helping out in this effort, please set up a 
 profile on Melange [3] and e-mail me your profile name.   

 Thanks for your help. 

 Sincerely, 

 Daniel 


 [1]: 
 http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2014/02/mentoring-organization-applications-now.html
  
 [2]: http://dev.clojure.org/display/community/Google+Summer+of+Code+2013 
 [3]: http://en.flossmanuals.net/melange/ 



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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-13 Thread Jony Hudson
Hi,

 I'm a bit late to the party here (and very new to the party - this being 
my first post to the group) but maybe this of interest:

 I've been working on number 1 and sort of number 2 since the start of the 
year, and have something pretty solid working now. It's a browser based 
REPL, in the notebook style with nice javascript-based visualisation. In 
fact, I said it better in the README that I was writing this morning:

You can think of it like a pretty REPL that can plot graphs, or you can 
think of it as an editor for rich documents that
can contain interactive Clojure code, graphs, table, notes, LaTeX formulae. 
Whatever works for you! One of the main
aims is to make it lightweight enough that you can use it day-to-day 
instead of the command-line REPL, but also offer
the power to perform and document complex data analysis and modelling 
tasks. Above all else, Gorilla tries not to
dictate your workflow, but rather to fit in to the way you like to work, 
hopefully putting a bit more power to your
elbow.

It's got some features that I think are pretty neat: visualisations as 
values, notebook files are also plain clojure files, very lightweight 
interface (it's no iPython!). I was planning to get an initial release out 
next week or the week after. (BTW, I should note that the client side is 
written in javascript, not clojurescript - as it evolved from an earlier 
javascript project). Screenshot of extremely hastily put together example, 
attached! I haven't done much in the way of Incanter integration, but it's 
planned (and should work really well I think).

I appreciate it's hard to judge, given that you haven't seen anything of it 
yet, but I'd be very happy if it was interest for the submission. And I'm 
in the position and hopefully have the skills to help mentor someone (being 
an academic) if that's of use. And I'd be really very happy to do it.

Anyway, like I say, I appreciate that I'm unknown here, and talking about a 
project that no-one has seen yet, at the last minute (!) but it seemed like 
it would be silly not to mention what I'm up to :-) I'm happy to write up a 
few words for the wiki in the format above if anyone thinks it's a good 
idea.

Yours,


Jony

https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-Ry_XuBKpUf8/Uv0nZ1nJRcI/D1Q/YEjTqHj5vlk/s1600/Screen+Shot+2014-02-13+at+20.12.17.png
 

On Thursday, 13 February 2014 18:31:18 UTC, A wrote:


 I think this is a great discussion, and there are myriad ways to get 
 there. I haven't settled my own opinions firmly enough to advocate for one 
 implementation over another at this point, but I do think that Incanter 
 could become a killer toolbox (even more than now) with the additon of...:


 1. a literate programming Notebook solution - inspiring repeatable 
 analysis, to communicate or publish methods and results).  Perhaps RStudio (
 http://www.rstudio.com/ide/), Light Table, and Emacs should be metaphors 
 for the shape this could take.  A stretch goal might be something like 
 Mathematica if this is even possible.

 2. a Clojurescript visualization layer to make use of the amazing 
 visualization currently in the javascript world.

 Perhaps these two things can effectively unify and become one via Light 
 Table or Browser repl.


 A last idea is the integration of Incanter analysis with Pallet (
 https://github.com/pallet/pallet , http://palletops.com/) to spawn 
 compute servers as necessary (perhaps GPU, perhaps cascalog/hadoop, or 
 vowpal wabbit / hadoop, etc.. )



 Best regards,
 Avram





 On Tuesday, February 11, 2014 4:44:54 PM UTC-8, Mikera wrote:

 On the idea of a workbench / clojurescript integration, I always liked 
 the idea of a Light Table based analytical workbench that could connect to 
 a Clojure-based Incanter server (which might of course be running all the 
 heavy computations on a core.matrix GPU backend..)

 I don't know enough ClojureScript to be able to mentor such a project, 
 but happy to add it as an idea. should be feasible for a smart GSoC 
 student 

 On Saturday, 8 February 2014 07:02:52 UTC+8, A wrote:


 A couple ideas put forth:

 1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated by 
 Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).

 2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.

 Thoughts?

 -Avram




 On Monday, February 3, 2014 11:59:24 AM UTC-8, Daniel Solano Gómez wrote:

 Hello, all, 

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google 
 Summer of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been 
 several notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, 
 last year's successful projects included: 

 * Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev 
 * core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant 
 * Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa 
 * Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in 
 Clojure, Dmitry Groshev 
 * Algebraic Expressions, 

Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-13 Thread Christopher Small
@Jony

This is very exciting. Is this on github or somewhere else public? Would 
love to take a look at what you are doing. The snapshot looks awesome :-)

Chris


On Thursday, February 13, 2014 12:15:11 PM UTC-8, Jony Hudson wrote:

 Hi,

  I'm a bit late to the party here (and very new to the party - this being 
 my first post to the group) but maybe this of interest:

  I've been working on number 1 and sort of number 2 since the start of the 
 year, and have something pretty solid working now. It's a browser based 
 REPL, in the notebook style with nice javascript-based visualisation. In 
 fact, I said it better in the README that I was writing this morning:

 You can think of it like a pretty REPL that can plot graphs, or you can 
 think of it as an editor for rich documents that
 can contain interactive Clojure code, graphs, table, notes, LaTeX 
 formulae. Whatever works for you! One of the main
 aims is to make it lightweight enough that you can use it day-to-day 
 instead of the command-line REPL, but also offer
 the power to perform and document complex data analysis and modelling 
 tasks. Above all else, Gorilla tries not to
 dictate your workflow, but rather to fit in to the way you like to work, 
 hopefully putting a bit more power to your
 elbow.

 It's got some features that I think are pretty neat: visualisations as 
 values, notebook files are also plain clojure files, very lightweight 
 interface (it's no iPython!). I was planning to get an initial release out 
 next week or the week after. (BTW, I should note that the client side is 
 written in javascript, not clojurescript - as it evolved from an earlier 
 javascript project). Screenshot of extremely hastily put together example, 
 attached! I haven't done much in the way of Incanter integration, but it's 
 planned (and should work really well I think).

 I appreciate it's hard to judge, given that you haven't seen anything of 
 it yet, but I'd be very happy if it was interest for the submission. And 
 I'm in the position and hopefully have the skills to help mentor someone 
 (being an academic) if that's of use. And I'd be really very happy to do it.

 Anyway, like I say, I appreciate that I'm unknown here, and talking about 
 a project that no-one has seen yet, at the last minute (!) but it seemed 
 like it would be silly not to mention what I'm up to :-) I'm happy to write 
 up a few words for the wiki in the format above if anyone thinks it's a 
 good idea.

 Yours,


 Jony


 https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-Ry_XuBKpUf8/Uv0nZ1nJRcI/D1Q/YEjTqHj5vlk/s1600/Screen+Shot+2014-02-13+at+20.12.17.png
  

 On Thursday, 13 February 2014 18:31:18 UTC, A wrote:


 I think this is a great discussion, and there are myriad ways to get 
 there. I haven't settled my own opinions firmly enough to advocate for one 
 implementation over another at this point, but I do think that Incanter 
 could become a killer toolbox (even more than now) with the additon of...:


 1. a literate programming Notebook solution - inspiring repeatable 
 analysis, to communicate or publish methods and results).  Perhaps RStudio (
 http://www.rstudio.com/ide/), Light Table, and Emacs should be metaphors 
 for the shape this could take.  A stretch goal might be something like 
 Mathematica if this is even possible.

 2. a Clojurescript visualization layer to make use of the amazing 
 visualization currently in the javascript world.

 Perhaps these two things can effectively unify and become one via Light 
 Table or Browser repl.


 A last idea is the integration of Incanter analysis with Pallet (
 https://github.com/pallet/pallet , http://palletops.com/) to spawn 
 compute servers as necessary (perhaps GPU, perhaps cascalog/hadoop, or 
 vowpal wabbit / hadoop, etc.. )



 Best regards,
 Avram





 On Tuesday, February 11, 2014 4:44:54 PM UTC-8, Mikera wrote:

 On the idea of a workbench / clojurescript integration, I always liked 
 the idea of a Light Table based analytical workbench that could connect to 
 a Clojure-based Incanter server (which might of course be running all the 
 heavy computations on a core.matrix GPU backend..)

 I don't know enough ClojureScript to be able to mentor such a project, 
 but happy to add it as an idea. should be feasible for a smart GSoC 
 student 

 On Saturday, 8 February 2014 07:02:52 UTC+8, A wrote:


 A couple ideas put forth:

 1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated 
 by Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).

 2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.

 Thoughts?

 -Avram




 On Monday, February 3, 2014 11:59:24 AM UTC-8, Daniel Solano Gómez 
 wrote:

 Hello, all, 

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google 
 Summer of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been 
 several notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, 
 last year's successful projects included: 

 * Enhance Neko for 

Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-11 Thread Daniel Solano Gómez
Hello,

On Sat Feb  8 15:48 2014, Alex Ott wrote:
 Hi Avram
 
 There is discussion in Incanter's issue about this:
 https://github.com/liebke/incanter/issues/193 - maybe it would be possible
 to implement support for different chart backends - like, D3.js, JavaFX,
 etc.
 
 
 
 On Sat, Feb 8, 2014 at 12:02 AM, A aael...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
  A couple ideas put forth:
 
  1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated by
  Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).
 
  2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.
 
  Thoughts?
 
  -Avram

I think these are some good ideas.  It would be a great help if you
could format them as follows, we can add them to the Wiki:

-
Title

Brief explanation: A few sentences describing the problem to solved.

Expected results: What should the student have been able to produce at
the end of the project. This includes things like tests and
documentation.

Knowledge prerequisites: If a student needs to know something to be able
to complete the project, be sure to list it.

Mentor: Add your name if you are developer who is willing to be a
primary or secondary mentor for the project.
-

Thanks for your help.

Sincerely,

Daniel

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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-11 Thread kovas boguta
I've added a project for data visualization components using Om/React.

There are a number of parallel threads that could be neatly resolved
using the Om/React model, including better chart support for Incanter,
and application-specific visualization. I've done some experiments in
this vein and so far, so good.

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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-11 Thread Mikera
On the idea of a workbench / clojurescript integration, I always liked the 
idea of a Light Table based analytical workbench that could connect to a 
Clojure-based Incanter server (which might of course be running all the 
heavy computations on a core.matrix GPU backend..)

I don't know enough ClojureScript to be able to mentor such a project, but 
happy to add it as an idea. should be feasible for a smart GSoC student 

On Saturday, 8 February 2014 07:02:52 UTC+8, A wrote:


 A couple ideas put forth:

 1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated by 
 Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).

 2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.

 Thoughts?

 -Avram




 On Monday, February 3, 2014 11:59:24 AM UTC-8, Daniel Solano Gómez wrote:

 Hello, all, 

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google 
 Summer of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been 
 several notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, 
 last year's successful projects included: 

 * Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev 
 * core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant 
 * Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa 
 * Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in 
 Clojure, Dmitry Groshev 
 * Algebraic Expressions, Maik Schünemann 
 * ClojureScript optimization and source maps support, Michal Marczyk 

 I would love to see Clojure participate again this year.  In order to do 
 so, we need to start our application which is due in less than two weeks. 
  We need volunteers to help prepare our application, and in particular it 
 would be great to have administrators that can help lead the process.  I am 
 certainly willing to help out, but if there is someone who wants to lead up 
 this effort, I would happy to assist. 

 Ideally, we could have multiple administrators to spread out the 
 following duties: 

 * Updating the community wiki for the year [2] 
 * Recruiting potential mentors 
 * Raising the profile of GSoC within the community 

 If we are accepted as a GSoC organisation, administrator duties include: 

 * Ensuring we meet the deadlines 
 * Arranging for travel to the mentor submit 
 * Arranging for students' travel to conferences 
 * If necessary, solve problems 

 I am afraid that last year I let the ball drop a bit with the mentor 
 summit and getting students to conferences.  With multiple administrators 
 to help spread the work around, I am sure we can make GSoC an even better 
 experience for everyone involved. 

 If you are interested in helping out in this effort, please set up a 
 profile on Melange [3] and e-mail me your profile name.   

 Thanks for your help. 

 Sincerely, 

 Daniel 


 [1]: 
 http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2014/02/mentoring-organization-applications-now.html
  
 [2]: http://dev.clojure.org/display/community/Google+Summer+of+Code+2013 
 [3]: http://en.flossmanuals.net/melange/ 



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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-08 Thread Alex Ott
Hi Avram

There is discussion in Incanter's issue about this:
https://github.com/liebke/incanter/issues/193 - maybe it would be possible
to implement support for different chart backends - like, D3.js, JavaFX,
etc.



On Sat, Feb 8, 2014 at 12:02 AM, A aael...@gmail.com wrote:


 A couple ideas put forth:

 1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated by
 Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).

 2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.

 Thoughts?

 -Avram





 On Monday, February 3, 2014 11:59:24 AM UTC-8, Daniel Solano Gómez wrote:

 Hello, all,

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google
 Summer of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been
 several notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example,
 last year's successful projects included:

 * Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev
 * core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant
 * Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa
 * Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in
 Clojure, Dmitry Groshev
 * Algebraic Expressions, Maik Schünemann
 * ClojureScript optimization and source maps support, Michal Marczyk

 I would love to see Clojure participate again this year.  In order to do
 so, we need to start our application which is due in less than two weeks.
  We need volunteers to help prepare our application, and in particular it
 would be great to have administrators that can help lead the process.  I am
 certainly willing to help out, but if there is someone who wants to lead up
 this effort, I would happy to assist.

 Ideally, we could have multiple administrators to spread out the
 following duties:

 * Updating the community wiki for the year [2]
 * Recruiting potential mentors
 * Raising the profile of GSoC within the community

 If we are accepted as a GSoC organisation, administrator duties include:

 * Ensuring we meet the deadlines
 * Arranging for travel to the mentor submit
 * Arranging for students' travel to conferences
 * If necessary, solve problems

 I am afraid that last year I let the ball drop a bit with the mentor
 summit and getting students to conferences.  With multiple administrators
 to help spread the work around, I am sure we can make GSoC an even better
 experience for everyone involved.

 If you are interested in helping out in this effort, please set up a
 profile on Melange [3] and e-mail me your profile name.

 Thanks for your help.

 Sincerely,

 Daniel


 [1]: http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2014/02/
 mentoring-organization-applications-now.html
 [2]: http://dev.clojure.org/display/community/Google+Summer+of+Code+2013
 [3]: http://en.flossmanuals.net/melange/

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With best wishes,Alex Ott
http://alexott.net/
Twitter: alexott_en (English), alexott (Russian)
Skype: alex.ott

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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-07 Thread A

A couple ideas put forth:

1. Incanter charts with d3 (http://d3js.org/) ?  Perhaps facilitated by 
Dribnet's Strokes library (https://github.com/dribnet/strokes).

2. Finding ways to integrate Incanter and Clojurescript.

Thoughts?

-Avram




On Monday, February 3, 2014 11:59:24 AM UTC-8, Daniel Solano Gómez wrote:

 Hello, all, 

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google Summer 
 of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been several 
 notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, last year's 
 successful projects included: 

 * Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev 
 * core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant 
 * Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa 
 * Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in 
 Clojure, Dmitry Groshev 
 * Algebraic Expressions, Maik Schünemann 
 * ClojureScript optimization and source maps support, Michal Marczyk 

 I would love to see Clojure participate again this year.  In order to do 
 so, we need to start our application which is due in less than two weeks. 
  We need volunteers to help prepare our application, and in particular it 
 would be great to have administrators that can help lead the process.  I am 
 certainly willing to help out, but if there is someone who wants to lead up 
 this effort, I would happy to assist. 

 Ideally, we could have multiple administrators to spread out the following 
 duties: 

 * Updating the community wiki for the year [2] 
 * Recruiting potential mentors 
 * Raising the profile of GSoC within the community 

 If we are accepted as a GSoC organisation, administrator duties include: 

 * Ensuring we meet the deadlines 
 * Arranging for travel to the mentor submit 
 * Arranging for students' travel to conferences 
 * If necessary, solve problems 

 I am afraid that last year I let the ball drop a bit with the mentor 
 summit and getting students to conferences.  With multiple administrators 
 to help spread the work around, I am sure we can make GSoC an even better 
 experience for everyone involved. 

 If you are interested in helping out in this effort, please set up a 
 profile on Melange [3] and e-mail me your profile name.   

 Thanks for your help. 

 Sincerely, 

 Daniel 


 [1]: 
 http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2014/02/mentoring-organization-applications-now.html
  
 [2]: http://dev.clojure.org/display/community/Google+Summer+of+Code+2013 
 [3]: http://en.flossmanuals.net/melange/ 


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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-04 Thread Alex Miller
Daniel, I'd be happy to help as an administrator, particularly if you can 
provide some guidance from previous years. I can also help re getting 
students to conferences.

Alex


On Monday, February 3, 2014 1:59:24 PM UTC-6, Daniel Solano Gómez wrote:

 Hello, all, 

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google Summer 
 of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been several 
 notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, last year's 
 successful projects included: 

 * Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev 
 * core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant 
 * Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa 
 * Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in 
 Clojure, Dmitry Groshev 
 * Algebraic Expressions, Maik Schünemann 
 * ClojureScript optimization and source maps support, Michal Marczyk 

 I would love to see Clojure participate again this year.  In order to do 
 so, we need to start our application which is due in less than two weeks. 
  We need volunteers to help prepare our application, and in particular it 
 would be great to have administrators that can help lead the process.  I am 
 certainly willing to help out, but if there is someone who wants to lead up 
 this effort, I would happy to assist. 

 Ideally, we could have multiple administrators to spread out the following 
 duties: 

 * Updating the community wiki for the year [2] 
 * Recruiting potential mentors 
 * Raising the profile of GSoC within the community 

 If we are accepted as a GSoC organisation, administrator duties include: 

 * Ensuring we meet the deadlines 
 * Arranging for travel to the mentor submit 
 * Arranging for students' travel to conferences 
 * If necessary, solve problems 

 I am afraid that last year I let the ball drop a bit with the mentor 
 summit and getting students to conferences.  With multiple administrators 
 to help spread the work around, I am sure we can make GSoC an even better 
 experience for everyone involved. 

 If you are interested in helping out in this effort, please set up a 
 profile on Melange [3] and e-mail me your profile name.   

 Thanks for your help. 

 Sincerely, 

 Daniel 


 [1]: 
 http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2014/02/mentoring-organization-applications-now.html
  
 [2]: http://dev.clojure.org/display/community/Google+Summer+of+Code+2013 
 [3]: http://en.flossmanuals.net/melange/ 


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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-04 Thread Daniel Solano Gómez
Thanks, Alex and Ambrose,

I really appreciate the help.

On Tue Feb  4 05:41 2014, Alex Miller wrote:
 Daniel, I'd be happy to help as an administrator, particularly if you can 
 provide some guidance from previous years. I can also help re getting 
 students to conferences.

This would be a big help.  To get started as an admin, the first step is
to go to Melage https://www.google-melange.com and sign in with a
Google account.  Once you've done that, you'll need to create a profile.
I need the username of at least one other person so that I can open our
application.

I'll be making edits to the community wiki soon, and as soon as its
ready, I'll post a message to the mailing lists letting people know it's
time to populate the project ideas page and review our answers for the
org application.

Thanks again.

Sincerely,

Daniel

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GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-03 Thread Daniel Solano Gómez
Hello, all,

Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google Summer of 
Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been several notable 
projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, last year's successful 
projects included:

* Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev
* core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant
* Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa
* Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in Clojure, 
Dmitry Groshev
* Algebraic Expressions, Maik Schünemann
* ClojureScript optimization and source maps support, Michal Marczyk

I would love to see Clojure participate again this year.  In order to do so, we 
need to start our application which is due in less than two weeks.  We need 
volunteers to help prepare our application, and in particular it would be great 
to have administrators that can help lead the process.  I am certainly willing 
to help out, but if there is someone who wants to lead up this effort, I would 
happy to assist.

Ideally, we could have multiple administrators to spread out the following 
duties:

* Updating the community wiki for the year [2]
* Recruiting potential mentors
* Raising the profile of GSoC within the community

If we are accepted as a GSoC organisation, administrator duties include:

* Ensuring we meet the deadlines
* Arranging for travel to the mentor submit
* Arranging for students' travel to conferences
* If necessary, solve problems

I am afraid that last year I let the ball drop a bit with the mentor summit and 
getting students to conferences.  With multiple administrators to help spread 
the work around, I am sure we can make GSoC an even better experience for 
everyone involved.

If you are interested in helping out in this effort, please set up a profile on 
Melange [3] and e-mail me your profile name.  

Thanks for your help.

Sincerely,

Daniel


[1]: 
http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2014/02/mentoring-organization-applications-now.html
[2]: http://dev.clojure.org/display/community/Google+Summer+of+Code+2013
[3]: http://en.flossmanuals.net/melange/

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Re: GSoC 2014: org applications now open

2014-02-03 Thread Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant
Hi Daniel,

Thanks for chasing this up.

I will volunteer for mentoring and any administration that needs doing.

I'll send you my username.

Thanks,
Ambrose

On Tue, Feb 4, 2014 at 3:59 AM, Daniel Solano Gómez cloj...@sattvik.comwrote:

 Hello, all,

 Apparently, it's already time for organisations to apply for Google Summer
 of Coder 2014 [1].   This is a great program, and there have been several
 notable projects that have benefited as a result.  For example, last year's
 successful projects included:

 * Enhance Neko for Android, Alexander Yakushev
 * core.typed: Extensions and Documentation, Ambrose Bonnaire-Sergeant
 * Clojure Compiler port to Clojure (CinC), Bronsa
 * Implementation of core.matrix-compatible multidimensional array in
 Clojure, Dmitry Groshev
 * Algebraic Expressions, Maik Schünemann
 * ClojureScript optimization and source maps support, Michal Marczyk

 I would love to see Clojure participate again this year.  In order to do
 so, we need to start our application which is due in less than two weeks.
  We need volunteers to help prepare our application, and in particular it
 would be great to have administrators that can help lead the process.  I am
 certainly willing to help out, but if there is someone who wants to lead up
 this effort, I would happy to assist.

 Ideally, we could have multiple administrators to spread out the following
 duties:

 * Updating the community wiki for the year [2]
 * Recruiting potential mentors
 * Raising the profile of GSoC within the community

 If we are accepted as a GSoC organisation, administrator duties include:

 * Ensuring we meet the deadlines
 * Arranging for travel to the mentor submit
 * Arranging for students' travel to conferences
 * If necessary, solve problems

 I am afraid that last year I let the ball drop a bit with the mentor
 summit and getting students to conferences.  With multiple administrators
 to help spread the work around, I am sure we can make GSoC an even better
 experience for everyone involved.

 If you are interested in helping out in this effort, please set up a
 profile on Melange [3] and e-mail me your profile name.

 Thanks for your help.

 Sincerely,

 Daniel


 [1]:
 http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2014/02/mentoring-organization-applications-now.html
 [2]: http://dev.clojure.org/display/community/Google+Summer+of+Code+2013
 [3]: http://en.flossmanuals.net/melange/

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