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Updated GSoC_2017 (textile)
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@ -104,22 +104,28 @@ h2. For students interested in applying
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# Once (and if!) OpenCV gets accepted as GSoC org this year, and we are told how many slots we will get *and* you've signed up for a project with us in March before the April 3rd deadline: *Then:*
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** We will weigh the students and projects against the mentors we gather and the mentor's interests and choose which students/project to pursue.
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** Accepted students will be posted on the GSoC site in May (and we will notify the accepted students ourselves).
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** Students are paid over the summer by Google *IF* the mentor accepts the student's work. There are several milestone based go-nogo points.
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h2. For computer vision professionals interested in mentoring
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# Go to the "GSoC site":https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/ and sign up.
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# Request to be a mentor for OpenCV there.
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# We accept or reject you
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# Students submit projects and you
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** find a project you want to mentor (several students might try for the same project)
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** contact us about it through opencv-gsoc-2017@googlegroups.com so we can be sure there is not someone already handling that project
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** contact the students to assess which one if any are capable of coding that up in a summer.
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# We get a slot allocation from Google, the administrators then _"spend"_ the slots in order of priority
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# Contact us on the opencv-gsoc googlegroups mailing list above and ask to be a mentor (or we will ask you in some known cases)
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# If we accept you, we will post a request from the Google Summer of Code OpenCV project site asking you to join.
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# You must accept the request and *you are a mentor!*
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# You then:
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** Go to the opencv-gsoc googlegroups mailing list above and look through student project proposals, find a student and project you like and work with them to refine a realistic proposal that they can implement in a summer (you have to judge whether the student is capable -- *absolutely no non-coders in the language you need, typically C++, accepted!* Summer is too short to learn to code and get something done).
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*** you may also find (good) students and get them to apply, perhaps to your pet project idea
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** Once you find or create a project proposal that you want to mentor
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*** several students might try for the same project
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*** alternatively, you might have to convince a student to change projects to one you like or recruit an external student to join Google Summer of Code and apply to your project
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** But, always encourage students to officially apply through the Google Summer of Code site -- it helps us and them.
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# We later get a slot allocation from Google, the administrators then _"spend"_ the slots in order of priority influenced by whether there's a capable mentor or not for each topic.
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# Students must finally actually accept to do that project (some sign up for multiple organizations and then choose)
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** Sheesh!
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*If* you are accepted as a mentor *and* you find a suitable student *and* we give you a slot *and* the student signs up for it, +*then*+ you are a mentor.
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*If* you are accepted as a mentor *and* you find a suitable student *and* we give you a slot *and* the student signs up for it, +*then*+ you are an actual mentor.
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** It sounds harder than it is.
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** You get paid a modest stipend over the summer to mentor, typically $500 minus an org fee of 6%.
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*** Several mentors donate their salary, earning ever better positions in heaven when that comes.
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***
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