Talk:Summer of Content 2007 History
What this page is: This is a place to discuss the current Summer of Content 2007 session of Summer of Content as well as the Summer of Content program overall and what we could do with it in the future. Post your ideas, questions, and thoughts! Click here to leave a note. You may also be looking for: For discussions on the northern and southern summer sessions this year, see #Summer of Content 2007. For older discussions (warning: lots of old and outdated stuff!) see the archive. How to sign up to mentor/be an internWhere can I go to join the program or submit an idea?
Summer of Content 2007There are two 2007 sessions planned - an initial pilot season over August and September, and a session starting in December and running through February. Contact me when the applications are up!notes on orthogonalityprojects have multiple authors multiple interested interns multiple experienced/interested mentors interns have multiple project interests interns have one personal application and description of interests mentors have one personal applicatoin and description of experience there is no restriction on projects <--> applications. a project may end up being proposed by an anon and never have any interested mentors or interns on nesting templatesCheck out the design of the HIG. Eben and I spent a while working out the right recursively nestable page structure so that each page makes sense on its own, and has sensible headers, some of which show up on the leaf page and others which show up in transclusion. if you want to include header navs, make sure they are noincluded. Sj talk Need focus on joining the communityKarsten Wade, Red Hat (paraphrased): One thing we ran into with the Summer of Code was a lack of Collaboration. Projects need to be something that works with the existing community of the open-source organization. It's hard for mentors when students go off in a corner and work on everything themselves instead of becoming part of the community (it doesn't create "less work" for the existing developers, they want new people to take the time to join the community, not just crank out a deliverable that might not work for the existing culture.) Can fix this somewhat by giving people parts of collaborations instead of selected individual projects, make it clear that it's their job to partner with other human beings.
Meta-projectsAnother suggestion from Karsten: Summer of Code recruits individual interns, why not recruit teams or clusters instead? Have one project be in charge of communication between other projects, one in charge of reuse and accessibility of other projects... make "meta-projects" that facilitate usage and community building for other interns.
BountiesAnother solution for matching content problems and contributors are bounties. They already exist for open source problems, originated with mathematics problems (solve X theorem, get $Y - both large and very small amounts for problems ranging from Fermat's Last Theorem to "prove this tiny easy lemma"). Have people post bounties with dollar amounts; start a distributed system.
Trustworthiness?
Problem - lack of community?
Celebrity-sponsored bountiesFrom Josh Gay: Another interesting thing: in math, it's not just the problem that is interesting, it is the person who poses the problem (and isn't able to solve it). For instance, on the Summer of Code forums, there's just as much discussion around t-shirts and certificates as there is around code.
Josh Gay: This can be an opportunity for us, since we have a large mindshare, to reach out to sponsors: famous people... not to necessarily contribute time or energy, but to put their name to a set of bounties that they care about. kids don't just get 10 bucks, but get that from a local soccer player with a name attached to it. this is a good opportunity to set this up properly for people always going around, like nicholas, to say "hey! if you want to help, put your name to these and kids get a thing thanking them from you. Example potential bounty sponsors: Shuttleworth, Shakira, Bono, etc. put $10 down (or some other tiny sum) on a project they care about. Karsten Wade: Bragging rights are important, have a little flag or something you can post on a website that can show how many problems you've solved (bounties you've claimed). the trouble is the only way to really be successful is if it's done in a truly open way (people can see the things you've done to warrant "bounty flags") - so you can make a bounty that's translating the subtitles of something into another lang, or editing the braille output of a particular doc or doing those particular things... which aren't necessarily that glamorous.. bounties might help by attaching meaning to them at the same time.
ToolsSome possible tools from teleconference brainstorming:
Availability of toolsKarsten Wade: Bounty systems (and open content work in general) wouldn't work if everyone had to have a copy of a toolsuite and a computer. From teleconference: Tools need to be easily available, accessible... we're still biased towards people who want to spend all day in front of a computer (and who have a computer in the first place).
SuggestionThe Summer of Content page had better have {OLPC} template on it to avoid any misunderstanding regarding to the scope of participation. php5 10:52, 24 July 2007 (EDT)
Organizations to contactMentor orgs with projects
more meta
with foundations or umbrellas
mentor orgs and mentoring mentors
others
Australia) annonces
to do for second round
A better explanation?We need a better short blurb for SoCon. Here's another shot. Mchua 03:57, 14 August 2007 (EDT) The Summer of Content (SoCon) program is an initiative started by One Laptop Per Child, the Commonwealth of Learning, Fedora, and Google. Every summer (Jun-Aug for the northern hemisphere, Dec-Feb for the southern hemisphere), the program matches interns with volunteer mentors from local free culture and open content organizations to complete a paid, full-time project in creating, promoting, or otherwise supporting open content and free culture. Interns, mentors, and mentor organizations (which oversee projects done for their group) can be located anywhere; although local and in-person collaboration is encouraged and most mentors will come from the same country as the interns they sponsor, the program is designed so that the work can be completed independently by communicating via email or some other medium. SoCon provides matchmaking, coordination, help with publicity, and assistance to mentor orgs in securing and distributing stipends for interns. And, of course, t-shirts for everyone). There is a special emphasis on recruiting interns and mentors from the developing world, as well as the creation and support of free culture and open-content projects in local (non-English) languages and in formats not traditionally considered to be "content" - for instance, writing an open textbook on running youth programmes would be a project, but translating that textbook into Urdu, developing a curriculum using that textbook, or running an after-school club at the local youth center to encourage children to help edit the textbook would also be projects. Benefits:
Visit http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Summer_of_Content for more information, or contact SoCon co-coordinator Mel Chua at mel@laptop.org with any comments or questions. Long term structureThis is a strawman proposal for thinking beyond the pilot summer. Please edit. Mchua 04:18, 14 August 2007 (EDT)
Templatesduplication of wikibooksAre people intending to create books using this wiki? If so, then this looks like a massive duplication of the wikibooks effort. There are even kid-specific projects over there. Wikibooks has all the infrastructure set up for this kind of thing. They have templates and other stuff for making nice PDF documents from a wiki -- the result is much cleaner than a regular dump of wiki data. Wikibooks is a well-managed wiki on heavy-duty servers, done by the same people as wikipedia. The wikibooks regulars are friendly, and would be happy to have you. Please consider moving everything there. The Mediawiki export and import features can be used to transfer everything. (import requires admin privs on the destination wiki) 24.110.145.32 19:32, 10 September 2007 (EDT) 2008?This article refers to the 2007 program. Is a 2008 one in the works? If so, it may make sense to create a new page here and preserve the old one on a new title. |