Message 1: On Sat, 12. Mar 14:40, Adrien Destugues wrote:
Hi,Thanks so much for your reply Adrien. You are the mentor (at least one of many)
It doesn't matter if you are a student or not. What matters is making
reasonable commitments for GSoC.
If you have a full-time job, it's unlikely that you can complete a 350 hour
project in addition to your
job. If your application has a reasonable plan (that is, no promises to work
60+ hours per week in total),
it should be fine.
It is probably a good idea to aim for one of the "small" projects in that
case. The extended timeline
combined with a long project is also an option, but you have to check with
the mentor for the project
idea you are interested in. They may not want to commit to mentoring for a
whole 6 month.
Let us know which idea(s) you are interested in, and we can further discuss
how we could set things up.
--
Adrien / PulkoMandy
GSoC org admin for Haiku
12 mars 2022 14:25 "Vikramraj Sitpal" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> a écrit:
Hello GSoC mentors,
I am planning to apply for GSoC '22, and Haiku's project ideas seem
appealing to me. As per the new
GSoC guidelines, one does not have to be a student to apply. I work
full-time in the US, and I was
wondering if Haiku mentors would prefer a student over others (this seems
to be the case with an
org I recently spoke to). Also, GSoC has updated their timeline for coding
submissions [0]. Since I
am working too, this would help me immensely in managing my time
efficiently. What are your
thoughts/preferences in this case?
I am sure you understand why I would like to get this out of the way before
I apply.
[0] - https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/timeline
Thanks,
Vikram