These are all the frequently asked questions about the Fedora Summer Coding program.
2010 FAQs
These questions are specific to the 2010 program, which began in April 2010.
I'm a student, what should I do?
Read this page.
After you read that page, ask your questions on this mailing list.
How much is the student stipend?
The goal is to fund students at two pay rates, depending on the size of the project. US$5000 for full projects and US$2500 for half projects.
Full projects are expected to run from 8 to 10 weeks, covering the whole schedule.
Half projects are expected to run from 4 to 5 weeks, covering a specific 50% portion of the schedule. Half projects must be approved by the project mentor, and the revised schedule included in the proposal.
I'm a mentor, what should I do?
Read this page.
After you read that page, join this mailing list to discuss your project idea(s).
What is the final schedule?
This schedule actually lives on Summer Coding 2010 schedule:
This schedule is ready for Summer Coding 2010. Join the discussion mailing list and/or watch this page to be updated about schedule changes.
Start dates are emphasized and deadlines are in bold emphasis for student items.
- April
- 7 April - Students can begin submitting applications
- May
- Whole month - students, mentors, and sub-projects get to know each other
- 13 May - Mentors need to finish idea pages
- 20 May - Students applications + proposals need to be in
- 21 May - Sponsors must pledge funding by this point
- 24 May - Organizers finalize how many applications will be accepted
- 27 May - Mentors + admins finalize rank-ordered list
- 28 May - Students informed yes/no about application
- June
- Whole month - code, interact
- 01 June - Project begins (depending on proposal)
- July
- 05 July - Midterm evaluations period begins
- 05 July - Student midterm deadline for evaluation (first, soft deadline)
- 08 July - Student midterm deadline for evaluation (final deadline)
- 12 July - Midterm evaluations due from mentors
- August
- 09 August - Project coding completes
- 16 August - Students final report, code snapshot, and evaluations due
- 20 August - Mentor evaluations due for students
- 23 August - Final evaluations due back to students
- 25 August - Mentor, sub-project evaluations of the Summer Coding program requested
- September
- 01 September - Sponsors receive report from organizers
- 06 September - Sponsors release and deliver funds (proposed date)
How do I know I qualify as a student?
You must be 18 years of age or older by 28 May 2010.
You must be enrolled in school currently but on extended holiday for most of the Summer Coding 2010 program.
A student is a person enrolled or accepted at an accredited tertiary institution, such as but not limited to colleges, universities, other undergraduate programs, and graduate programs such as masters and PhD. There are no field of study restrictions on students. You may be just about to enter a school if you are enrolled by 28 May 2010. You may be a full-time or part-time student. You may graduate during the program as long as you are enrolled as a student on 28 May 2010.
You must be eligible to work in the country where you will be for the majority of the time of Fedora Summer Coding 2010. You may be asked to furnish proof of student status or eligibility to work.
General FAQs
How do I get in touch with mentors and other participants?
The best way is via our [mailing list].
You can join us on our IRC, #fedora-summer-coding on Freenode. There is a web-based chat interface you can use.
What language will I be coding in?
That depends on the project. KDE SIG people might want you to use Qt while others might prefer Python.
Who owns the code produced in the project?
If you created the code or content, you own the copyright.
Remember that free and open source software projects are collaborations. Code and content resulting from those collaborations are put under a free and open license, and copyright notice typically lists all contributors.
What license(s) do I use?
Code is usually included in a project under the license of the project itself. If there is a need to put a new license on code or content, one of the goode free and open licenses from this page will work:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing
Make sure to discuss final licensing choices with your mentor so you can find license conflicts early.
Can I submit more than one application?
Yes, you can. But mind it one good application might get you the project, 10 bad ones will never get you in.
Can I work on two projects simultaneously?
As of now, its a big no. We want you to concentrate on what you are doing.
The timeline is clashing with my other commitments.
While we have tried to relax the timeline as much as possible some students might still find it problematic. We suggest that you talk to your mentor and try to fix up a schedule that works for you.
Who will own the code I write?
Of course you will own the code. We just want the code to be released under an open source license.