Links Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.co...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
16 CURRENT | Sreyanth |
June 19, 2013 17:39
| over 11 years ago
LinksPublic Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Students: Post your proposals on this page Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas StudentsMohit Meena: Android Aerial Acquisition App
Sreyantha Chary: Find closest match spectra from database
Bharat Bhushan: Web service for NDVI and NRG compositions from visible and infrared images
Timelinehttp://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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15 | warren |
June 17, 2013 14:39
| over 11 years ago
LinksPublic Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Students: Post your proposals on this page Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas StudentsMohit Meena: Android Aerial Acquisition App
Sreyanth Mori: Find closest match spectra from database
Bharat Bhushan: Web service for NDVI and NRG compositions from visible and infrared images
Timelinehttp://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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14 | SkyHigh |
June 14, 2013 18:44
| over 11 years ago
LinksPublic Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Students: Post your proposals on this page Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas StudentsMohit Public Lab: http://publiclab.org/profile/Mohit Git Hub: https://github.com/mohit216 Sreyanth : profile: http://publiclab.org/profile/Sreyanth, github: https://github.com/Sreyanth Bharat Public Lab: http://publiclab.org/profile/SkyHigh Github: https://github.com/InkCoder Timelinehttp://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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13 | warren |
June 12, 2013 15:52
| over 11 years ago
LinksPublic Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Students: Post your proposals on this page Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas StudentsMohit Public Lab: http://publiclab.org/profile/Mohit Git Hub: https://github.com/mohit216 Sreyanth : profile: http://publiclab.org/profile/Sreyanth, github: https://github.com/Sreyanth Bharat Timelinehttp://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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12 | Sreyanth |
May 31, 2013 16:42
| over 11 years ago
LinksPublic Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Students: Post your proposals on this page Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas StudentsMohit Sreyanth : profile: http://publiclab.org/profile/Sreyanth, github: https://github.com/Sreyanth Bharat Timelinehttp://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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11 | warren |
May 31, 2013 14:23
| over 11 years ago
LinksPublic Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Students: Post your proposals on this page Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas StudentsMohit Sreyanth Bharat Timelinehttp://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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10 | warren |
May 03, 2013 20:26
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Students: Post your proposals on this page Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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9 | warren |
April 19, 2013 20:24
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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8 | warren |
April 19, 2013 20:17
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas 2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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7 | warren |
April 19, 2013 20:17
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas 2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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6 | warren |
April 19, 2013 20:16
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas 2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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5 | warren |
April 19, 2013 20:16
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas 2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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4 | warren |
April 19, 2013 20:15
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013
Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas 2013 Mentoring Organization ApplicationWhy is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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3 | gonzoearth |
April 17, 2013 18:43
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/org/google/gsoc2013/public_lab Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013 Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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2 | gonzoearth |
April 17, 2013 18:13
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2013/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2013 Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2013/Ideas Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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1 | warren |
April 17, 2013 18:04
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Application page Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2012/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2012 Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2012/Ideas Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? GSoC ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
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0 | gonzoearth |
April 17, 2013 17:58
| over 11 years ago
Public Lab Google Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013 Are you a student? See the application page FAQ: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2012/faqs#mentoring_apply Timeline: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/events/google/gsoc2012 Advice for Mentors: http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/AdviceforMentors and via Gnome project: http://people.gnome.org/~federico/docs/summer-of-code-mentoring-howto/ Project ideas: See our GSoC ideas page! http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Want to expand this list? See example project ideas list: http://community.kde.org/GSoC/2012/Ideas Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2013? GSOC is a great initiative towards engaging young developers with the Public Lab open source community, a goal of Public Lab. Additionally, Summer of Code will build on our existing relationship with Google, in which Google ingests Public Lab open source mapping data--the platform of which we hope to improve through this opportunity. What do you hope to gain by participating? The proposed Public Lab GSOC activities will directly contribute to improving the Public Lab open source platforms. What is the URL for your Ideas list? http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas What is the main development mailing list for your organization? web@googlegroups.com What is the main IRC channel for your organization? http://publiclaboratory.org/chat What criteria did you use to select your mentors for this year's program? Please be as specific as possible. Our mentors are part of the Public Laboratory core web team and are active contributors to the projects listed on the ideas page. Some have specific formal training in remote sensing image processing, data collection, or georectification. Others represent user groups who help to strategically plan new features and directions for the software. Mentors volunteer for their positions and will be approved by consensus of the developers in the respective software projects. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing students? We have weekly phone meetings on Fridays which we will be asking the students to attend, and we require students to post updates by blog, tweet, or email (list). We also have workspace in some cities for those interested in working in the same space as other Public Lab contributors. We find that most students have trouble if they're not sure what to do next -- therefore we will have brainstorming support sessions weekly to help students identify, understand, and innovate solutions to their challenges. Students will also be able to use the GitHub issue tracker to stay focused on project milestones within that system. GitHub will syndicate updates to the project students, and facilitate discussion on each project issue. What is your plan for dealing with disappearing mentors? Several mentors are staff members in the nonprofit arm of Public Lab, and check in twice per week. Others will be asked to participate in weekly calls. We also have backup mentors available for most projects and will have periodic mentor round-table discussions by email. What steps will you take to encourage students to interact with your project's community before and during the program? We are reaching out primarily through our existing networks to recruit students, and in the past have required students working with the project to post either to the mailing list or on our website with weekly updates. We also have in-person events where contributors mix and discuss their work; this helps to build a strong developer community and we will encourage students to take part. Often encouraging students to present their work to the community or to the public (in talks, blog posts, or videos) encourages them to take ownership of their work and to take pride in it, building longer-term commitment to projects. What will you do to encourage that your accepted students stick with the project after Google Summer of Code concludes? Public Lab is particularly adept to facilitating collaborative research and development. The international Public Lab community stays connected through the Public Lab website which is content user driven. Students will receive collaborative support through other users on the site and Google Groups. Are you a new organization who has a Googler or other organization to vouch for you? If so, please list their name(s) here. No, but if you would like to please see Christiaan Adams. Describe your organization. The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) is a community which develops and applies open-source tools to environmental exploration and investigation. By democratizing inexpensive and accessible Do-It-Yourself techniques, Public Laboratory creates a collaborative network of practitioners who actively re-imagine the human relationship with the environment. The core PLOTS program is focused on civic science, in which we research open source hardware and software tools and methods to generate knowledge and share data about community environmental health. Our goal is to increase the ability of underserved communities to identify, redress, remediate, and create awareness and accountability around environmental concerns. PLOTS achieves this by providing online and offline training, education and support, and by focusing on locally-relevant outcomes that emphasize human capacity and understanding. Why is your organization applying to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012? What do you hope to gain by participating? We have several active and new open source software projects and an active community, and GSOC would be a great way to bring some of these tools closer to maturity, and a great way to reach out to new coders and strengthen our contributor community. What Open Source Initiative approved license(s) does your project use? MapKnitter, Clashifier, and Spectral Workbench are GPLv3. Infrared-visible-video-kit is MIT licensed. Does your organization have an application template you would like to see students use? If so, please provide it now. http://publiclaboratory.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Organization Profile Name. Complete, formal name of the group. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science Home page url publiclab.org Public mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. http://publiclab.org/join https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/publiclaboratory Ideas list The URL to the ideas list of your organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-ideas Application template This template can be used by contributors, such as students and other non-member participants, when they apply to contribute to the organization. http://publiclab.org/wiki/gsoc-application-template Google+ url URL to the Google+ page of your organization https://plus.google.com/u/0/100235547529776394828/ gplus.to/PublicLab Blog url URL of the Blog of your Organization http://publiclab.org/tag/newsletter Facebook url URL of the Facebook page of your Organization http://www.facebook.com/PublicLab Twitter url URL of the Twitter profile of your Organization https://twitter.com/publiclab Feed url The URL should be a valid ATOM or RSS feed. Feed entries are shown on the home page. We are creating a feed of all items tagged with "gsoc" PUBLIC INFO Short name used for sidebar menu Public Lab Email Enter an email address to be used by would-be members seeking additional information. This can be an individual's email address or a mailing list address; use whichever will work best for you. web@publiclaboratory.org Public irc channel (and network) http://publiclaboratory.org/chat Development mailing list Mailing list email address, URL to sign-up page, etc. https://groups.google.com/group/grassrootsmapping https://groups.google.com/group/plots-spectrometry https://groups.google.com/group/plots-infrared Tags geo, gis, open-source, environment, infrared, spectroscopy, map, maps, ruby-on-rails, java, canvass element, android, ruby, javascript, imagemagick, rmagick, |
Revert |