
Hello, I wonder if some of you who may have had experience with Google's Summer of Code program could give me a little direction. I have an idea which projects I will be applying for. But I had a few questions. First of all, do I need to find a mentor who has already been accepted into the program before I apply? Or, is that part of the deciding factor for being accepted (wether or not there is a mentor for the proposed project)? There are a couple of projects listed in the Boost Wiki [http://www.crystalclearsoftware.com/cgi-bin/boost_wiki/wiki.pl?Google_Summer...] that I am interested in applying for. I have been using the Boost libraries for a few years now and am anxious for an opportunity to give back. My senior project [http://derrickhathaway.googlepages.com/gsi_mds.tar.gz] is a market data server based upon ASIO and I'm particularly interested in the projects related to that library. I have communicated a little with Michael Dickey who is involved in the development of the Pion Network Library [http://www.pion.org/projects/pion-network-library]. He is also working now with the developers of the C++ Network Library [http://sourceforge.net/projects/cpp-netlib]. This is one of the GSoC projects I will be proposing/applying for. He has been very helpful, but suggested that I inquire of those who may be involved with Google Summer of Code already. Thanks in advance, Derrick

Derrick Hathaway wrote:
First of all, do I need to find a mentor who has already been accepted into the program before I apply?
No. We, meaning the mentors, end up deciding who will be mentoring whom as is needed after we figure out which students we'll be accepting. Although given the nature of some of the projects it's obvious who will mentoring them.
Or, is that part of the deciding factor for being accepted (wether or not there is a mentor for the proposed project)?
We try not to make it a deciding factor. But it has happened in the past that we got really good applications, and had to decline them anyway because we just didn't have, even after attempting some recruiting, a mentor that could manage the project. -- -- Grafik - Don't Assume Anything -- Redshift Software, Inc. - http://redshift-software.com -- rrivera/acm.org (msn) - grafik/redshift-software.com -- 102708583/icq - grafikrobot/aim,yahoo,skype,efnet,gmail
participants (2)
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Derrick Hathaway
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Rene Rivera