
On 8 Mar 2014 at 14:18, Vinícius dos Santos Oliveira wrote:
I ask, because a strong proposal - which you already have now - also needs a proposed mentor to gain GSoC funding.
Now that you mentioned such need to have a proposed mentor earlier than I expected, I became a little more worried.
I should quickly explain how GSoC selects projects. Firstly students submit their proposals. We, the Boost community, then review and rank the proposals. The rank ordered proposals go to Google who then usually choose the top X proposals where X is the number of slots they award. The community ranking stage you see goes much better for you if you have a mentor championing your proposal to the community during the review stage. Without a mentor, you have no such champion.
Moreover, that proposed mentor can help you whittle your current proposal into a suitable summer project work item, and I'd like to match you up as soon as possible.
If it's not a problem for you, I'd like to have your help in whittle my proposal.
Well, I'll be blunt in saying my main interest in your proposal is extra testing for AFIO. I'm especially keen on ironing out ASIO-AFIO interop kinks in real world code. I'm also not as expert in HTTP and web services as others on this list who would therefore be better mentors. Besides, I also have a fair workload in administrating GSoC, it's turning out to be quite a bit at the moment.
I just want to finish the descriptions/designs of a usable core set of components before the decision of a timeline and deliverables. Do you think it's a good idea?
Oh yes, keep going. Potential mentors are watching everything you do with interest. Just remember to be realistic when scheduling: you don't get much done in a summer project. Tip: look more deeply into Pion which is a HTTP implementation based on Boost.ASIO, it's an alternative to cpp-netlib and it's also Boost based. Niall --- Boost C++ Libraries Google Summer of Code 2014 admin https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/wiki/SoC2014