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GSoC Organization Application 2021
Students are encouraged to visit 101.opensuse.org. The website lists multiple projects for the organization. Students can view the description of the projects and contact the organization's mentors if students have questions or need more information regarding a project. This will help students when writing their proposals to participate in the Google Summer of Code. Most of the projects focus on enhancing features or optimizing a new feature. Students should be committed to finishing the project during the months GSoC. Students should be familiar with the programming language(s) used by the project. Students are expected to have regular contact with their mentor and should contact the organization's administrators if they have any concerns or questions with regard to the project, program or mentor(s).
We started openSUSE with the principles of free software as primary driver to give all people the freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software they use. As a Linux distribution, we integrate, maintain and provide access to thousands of Open Source software projects. A healthy and growing developer community is the key to our success. It is important for us to attract new people to participate in the openSUSE community who provide new perspectives and backgrounds; GSoC is an opportunity to do that. openSUSE is an ideal fit for GSoC because we offer projects in different areas of Open Source. Students are mentored by experienced hackers from one of the oldest and diverse Open Source communities, which has proven structures, methods, processes and infrastructure. We advertise GSoC and the ideas that are at the heart of it to our whole community, which not only consists of developers but also millions of users.
The organization would consider a successful summer to be turning each student into a long-time open-source contributor. Giving each student the knowledge, skills and passion to pursue their software development goals is the standard our organization strives to achieve. We want give them the confidence and knowledge to apply for developer position. Having the students become contributing members of the open-source development community is the ultimate organizational goal.
6-10 for 2021. Each year is different
Our mentors are experienced long-time contributors to Open Source, to openSUSE in particular, and most of them have already participated in previous GSoC iterations, either as a student or as a mentor. openSUSE mentors and our administration team, are prepared and willing to build long-term relationships with their students, which focuses on setting goals, expectations, tracking and reporting the progress through agile collaboration. We describe thoroughly what we expect from a good mentor in our mentoring guidelines: http://101.opensuse.org/mentor/ Every year at the openSUSE Conference, our GSoC mentors can and meet to discuss our participation. To share our experiences during the program and to address challenges, we'll organize a bi-weekly mentor and a final retrospective meeting.
We believe in putting the Student's needs first. Mentoring is about them, not about the mentors or openSUSE's needs. So we always emphasize the mentee's need for learning, purpose, and fun. We encourage proposals that set clear goals for the project and expectations from students. Mentors are required to set up regular milestones that are reviewed and celebrated together. We believe that communicating on a regular schedule (daily at least) is what bonds mentors/mentee and we consider the consistency of that relationship very important. The administration team is focused on providing the best infrastructure for nurturing these relationships with tooling, marketing and guidance through regular discussions with both mentors and mentees.
From the first day, we will integrate the students as valued members of our community with all rights and obligations. We emphasize the need for communication as the basis of all collaboration in an Open Source project by having students report (at least weekly) about their progress to our community including mid-term and retrospective blog posts for our news portal https://news.opensuse.org/, which has been improved to encourage contributions from our community. To promote the collaboration between the students, to share experiences and to address challenges, the administration team organizes events for the student to meet. Additionally, we will encourage our students to attend our Conference (currently unknown, perhaps virtually). Students can use our travel support program (https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Travel_Support_Program) to attend and meet the community.
It's our belief that students join Open Source because of the technology, but they stay because of the people in the community. We emphasize selecting students with the intention of a long-term contribution to openSUSE and we train our mentors to focus on building a personal relationship with the student. Many of our previous students are still active in our community. We believe that meeting other students, mentors and collaborators in person was a big part of building that community relationship. To actively support the contribution afterward, we are prepared to offer students follow up projects before GSoC ends. Either with the same mentor or projects from our own mentoring program openSUSE 101 (http://101.opensuse.org).
Yes
2020, 2018, 2017, 2016, , 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, , 2009, 2008, , 2006
3
2
Accepted 2020: 3/3 2018: 2/2 2017: 5/5 2016: 6/6 2014: 14/14 2013: 10/12 2012: 9/12 2011: 13/14 2009: 6/9 2008: n/n 2006: n/n
Is there an organization new to GSoC that you would like to refer to the program for 2021? Feel free to add a few words about why they'd be a good fit:
2015
What year was your project started? 2005
https://github.com/openSUSE
No
openSUSE Project
Our community creates, promotes, improves and documents open-source software.
GPLv2
Operating Systems
Linux, Python, Kubernetes, AI, Rust
Operating Systems, software quality, developer tools, containers
The openSUSE project is a community effort to enhance and promote the use of Linux. openSUSE creates one of the world's best Linux distributions, as well as a variety of tools.
The openSUSE project is a worldwide effort that promotes the use of Linux everywhere. openSUSE creates one of the world's best Linux distributions, as well as a variety of tools, such as OBS, OpenQA, Kiwi, YaST, OSEM, Uyuni, all working together in an open, transparent and friendly manner as part of the worldwide Free and Open Source Software community. Distributions include a rolling release (Tumbleweed), a stable annual release (Leap) and operating systems for embedded, cloud and containers through MicroOS and Kubic.
The project is controlled by its community and relies on the contributions of individuals, working as testers, writers, translators, usability experts, artists and ambassadors or developers. The project embraces a wide variety of technology, people with different levels of expertise, speaking different languages and having different cultural backgrounds.
Students are encouraged to visit 101.opensuse.org. The website lists multiple projects for the organization. Students can view the description of the projects and contact the organization's mentors if students have questions or need more information regarding a project. This will help students when writing their proposals to participate in the Google Summer of Code. Most of the projects focus on enhancing features or optimizing a new feature. Students should be committed to finishing the project during the months GSoC. Students should be familiar with the programming language(s) used by the project. Students are expected to have regular contact with their mentor and should contact the organization's administrators if they have any concerns or questions with regard to the project, program or mentor(s).
AI, Kubernetes, operating system, containers, quality software, build tools, rust, python, golang, devops
https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:IRC_list