Hi everybody,
On Mittwoch 01 Juni 2005 03:44, Jeremy White wrote:
I think we should jump on this, folks.
...this is about the perfect moment to hopefully get one of my projects up and running: Wine in Academics[tm]. As some of you might know, we (ITOMIG) have a nice working agreement with professor Spruth at Tübingen university. He's willing to supervise academic projects based on Wine. So far, we have Michael, who's starting his work on the subject of porting Windows-based applications using the Winelib.
I intended give a talk to students about Wine and possible ways of doing e.g. a Master's thesis based on Wine, on june 13. The Google stipends are a very pleasant surprise that might help me in convincing people ;) However, I think as the Summer of Code applications must be made before june 14, I'll try to move that to next monday (june 6). For that purpose, I'd be very happy if you could help us in brainstorming and coming up with some ideas for cool projects. I'd present some of those ideas on monday, too, and I'll advertise all Wine-based candidates for the SOC at my faculty.
I have created a Wiki page at http://wiki.winehq.org/WineInAcademics that describes what kind of work would make good projects here - "Studienarbeit" and "Diplomarbeit" don't seem to have very good equivalents in the US system. However, a Diplomarbeit corresponds approximately to a Master's thesis, and I think almost all projects that fit into the Summer of Code would make at least a nice Studienarbeit, or maybe even serve as a good basis for a Diplomarbeit.
I can think of a few projects that ought to be fun and not too hard for a bright student.
That's great! I've taken myself the liberty of creating a Wiki page for project proposals, in order to make it easier to keep track of them. Volia: http://wiki.winehq.org/SummerOfCode
How should we structure it? My first thought was that we ought to have a set of volunteers (a dreaded committee perhaps), that reviews and agrees on the tasks (so that they can be normalized a bit). I'll even volunteer :-/. Other ideas?
Sounds good to me. Maybe it would be wise to first collect many ideas, and then make a selection for the SOC. Projects that are not selected might make a good base for other academic works or similar things, so I would be sad to see good ideas lost, even if they don't fit perfectly.
Cheers,
David