By Albert Santoni, Mixxx Project
Google Summer of Code 2008 has been a great opportunity to bring fresh new talent into the Mixxx development team. For those not familiar with Mixxx, it’s software that allows DJs to create live beatmixes. This year, Mixxx was supported by four students, each with a new project to help improve some aspect of Mixxx. As this was our second Summer of Code, we helped plan our students’ projects better this year, which led to our students producing more maintainable code with clear paths for integration into our trunk.
By William Fulton, SWIG administrator
SWIG is a programmers tool for semi-automating the calls to C or C++ code from almost any other programming language. The idea is to feed C/C++ header files into SWIG and SWIG then generates the ‘glue’ code so that your C/C++ library can be used from another language such as Python, Java, C#, Ruby, Perl etc. In fact there are implementations for supporting over 20 different of these target languages. The participating students have had a productive summer and have extended the number of languages and features supported in SWIG’s first Google Summer of Code™.
By Ben Goertzel, PhD, Director of Research, SIAI
This summer OpenCog was chosen by Google to participate in the Google Summer of Code™ project: Google funded 11 students from around the world to work under the supervision of experienced mentors associated with the OpenCog project, and the associated OpenBiomind project.
By Faik Yalcin Uygur, Pardus Google Summer of Code Organization Administrator
For Pardus’ first year in Google Summer of Code™, it was not a surprise for us that most of our applications were from Turkey, since Pardus is the most well known Linux distribution in our country. But as nearly every review about the project mentions, we are working on our global awareness, and we hope to get more international applications in the coming years.
By PostAuthorsName, Google Developer Programs
This was the second year that Thousand Parsec partook in the Google Summer of Code™, and we accomplished even more than we did in our very successful first year. For those who don’t know, Thousand Parsec is a framework for building turn based space empire building games. Many different types of rulesets can be developed which have a wide variety of features.
By Tim Ansell, Technical Solutions Engineering Team and Thousand Parsec Project Co-Founder
This was the second year that Thousand Parsec partook in the Google Summer of Code™, and we accomplished even more than we did in our very successful first year. For those who don’t know, Thousand Parsec is a framework for building turn based space empire building games. Many different types of rulesets can be developed which have a wide variety of features.
By Philip Johnson, Hackystat Project Administrator
The good folks at Aspiration Technology are once again creating their magic with the second Nonprofit Software Development Summit. Given current economic conditions looking rather sucktastic to say the least, I’m looking for inspiration these days. And I find I’m really excited about the power of FOSS to help organizations that have limited IT resources to accomplish their goals. Pragmatism, accompanied by noble goals, is unstoppable. Provided there is action.
By Murray Stokely, Software Engineering Team and FreeBSD Core Team Member
FreeBSD has participated as a mentoring organization in the Google Summer of Code™ each year since 2005. This year, FreeBSD mentored 21 students with a final success rate of 91%. Robert Watson and I have written a detailed summary of the FreeBSD 2008 Summer of Code experience. With the help of our mentors we’ve selected three successful projects to showcase here: