Summer of Code/2012

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Project candidates

A list of projects potential participants might contribute within GSoC program. Every project is shortly described with mentioning secondary skills for possible participants (the primal skill is desire to do something useful).

Note: Potential mentors and participants, please feel free to start adding things to this list.

Turtle Art Nutrition

Working with the maintainer of Turtle Blocks to further develop the prototype Turtle Nutrition plug-in into a stand-alone activity. In its current state, Turtle Nutrition is a plug-in to the Turtle Blocks application. The plug-in aims to raise awareness of nutritional values through visual programming elements.

Food-plugin.png

This project will involve more designing and testing than coding. But a working knowledge of Python is a must. Spanish-language skills is a plus, as we will most likely be testing the tool in one of our Latin American deployments.

Contact: User:Walter

Portfolio Videos

Working with the maintainer of Portfolio to add a mechanism for exporting .ogv (voice over still images) of a portfolio presentation. This is a request that has come from deployments: they'd like to be able to post videos of student work, which is currently available as a slide show with audio voice-over.

Portfolio-Tool.png

A working knowlewdge of Python and some gstreamer skills are a must.

Contact: User:Walter

Unified Journal View

Rather than viewing the details of a Journal entry on a separate page, the idea is to make the details appear in an expandabe in-line format on the main Journal view. The look and feel would be more like Google+ or Facebook. Performance will be a major challenge.

Journal-02.jpeg

This project requires some working knowledge of the low-level Sugar Journal and datastore code.

Contact: User:Walter

Sugar "Sweets" Trisquel GNU/Linux Distro

What we need to get Sugar into classrooms and community centers is a software distribution that works "out of the box" with both Sugar and Gnome. The Trisquel GNU/Linux distribution is the most promising of the efforts to make this a reality. I'd like to pilot it in my ICT lab in Arlington, Virginia, and would love to mentor a GSOCer hack the packages needed to make it work.

Contact: User:Jelkner

Background Image on Home View

Since we are replacing Hippo, it is relatively trivial to add a background image to the Home View. The image could be set from the Sugar control panel.

Benefit: Deployments could customize backgrounds for l12n purposes. Uses could customize the look of their machines. Background could add some structure to the Home View. The example below, just for fun, was generated in Turtle Art.

Background-spiral.png

Decent Python skills required and some familiarity with GTK.

Contact: User:Walter

Multi-touch Sugar

With the advent of a number touch-enabled devices capable of running Sugar and with the port to GTK-3, it is time to take seriously the issue of multitouch. How should we be exploiting touch in the interface? How will be circumvent some of the current UI affordances that either reply on the keyboard or hover, e.g., invoking the Sugar Frame?

Strong Python skills and experience with GTK-3 required.

Contact: User:Walter

Plugin Support

A number of activities, notably Turtle Art, are supporting plugins -- the ability to extend features by downloading additional modules. However, the mechanism for installing plugins is anything but friendly. It would be nice to design a uniform plugin bundle type and modify the activity installer to recognize this new type. Caveats include dependencies -- presumably the plugin would take care of that -- and version control -- plugins are often incumbent upon a specific version of an activity. ASLO hosting] should also be considered.

Strong Python skills and experience with Sugar toolkit required.

Contact: User:Walter

End-user Modifications of Sugar Source

We have an existing mechanism for duplicating and modifying Sugar activities: a copy of the bundle can be creaed in ~/Activities, where it can be modified by the end user. We also have a mechanism for viewing the Sugar toolkit source, but no such convenient way for making changes without risking messing up the system. While it should be easy enough to make a duplicate copy in the user's home directory, and to change the Python paths to use the modified code, we need some mechanism -- presumably at boot -- to choose which version to run: the installed version or the modified version.

Strong Python skills and experience with Sugar toolkit required.

Contact: User:Walter

Project Sharing Website

Create a Project Hosting Site similar to the Scratch website where kids can share the projects they have created using various Sugar Activities. The site should foster collaboration and sharing of projects. The Web Site should be built using a free web framework so that it can be installed at deployment sites. Some features include:

  • Ability to engage and connect with friends and classmates using various Social Networking sites/techniques.
  • Ability to post projects from various Sugar Activities (ex: Turtle Blocks, Etoys, Memorize, Physics, etc.)
  • Separate landing pages for different audiences (kids, teachers, parents, etc)
  • Section to share kid created art from projects
  • Ability for users to create galleries (of their own projects, favorite projects, subject specific topics, etc).
  • Ability to have “private classroom spaces”
  • Tools to support community management of the site
  • Multi-language support

Contact: User:MrSteve

Learn to program -- in Turtle Art

In much the same way that [1] walks newbies through the basics of programming in Javascript, it would be nice to walk newbies through the basics of Turtle Art. There is already a provision within Turtle Art for programatically creating and moving blocks and executing program stacks. So it would be a matter of developing the exercises.

Requires some familiarity with Logo programming and Python.

Contact: User:Walter

Proposals Template

Put and fill your proposal template at a page like:

http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Summer_of_Code/2012/YourProposal

About you

  • What is your name?
  • What is your email address?
  • What is your Sugar Labs wiki username?
  • What is your IRC nickname?
  • What is your primary language? (We have mentors who speak multiple languages and can match you with one of them if you'd prefer.)
  • Where are you located, and what hours do you tend to work? (We also try to match mentors by general time zone if possible.)
  • Have you participated in an open-source project before? If so, please send us URLs to your profile pages for those projects, or some other demonstration of the work that you have done in open-source. If not, why do you want to work on an open-source project this summer?

About your project

  • What is the name of your project?
  • Describe your project in 10-20 sentences. What are you making? Who are you making it for, and why do they need it? What technologies (programming languages, etc.) will you be using?
  • What is the timeline for development of your project? The Summer of Code work period is 7 weeks long, May 21 - August 13; tell us what you will be working on each week. (As the summer goes on, you and your mentor will adjust your schedule, but it's good to have a plan at the beginning so you have an idea of where you're headed.) Note that you should probably plan to have something "working and 90% done" by the midterm evaluation (July 9-13); the last steps always take longer than you think, and we will consider cancelling projects which are not mostly working by then.
  • Convince us, in 5-15 sentences, that you will be able to successfully complete your project in the timeline you have described. This is usually where people describe their past experiences, credentials, prior projects, schoolwork, and that sort of thing, but be creative. Link to prior work or other resources as relevant.

You and the community

  • If your project is successfully completed, what will its impact be on the Sugar Labs community? Give 3 answers, each 1-3 paragraphs in length. The first one should be yours. The other two should be answers from members of the Sugar Labs community, at least one of whom should be a Sugar Labs GSoC mentor. Provide email contact information for non-GSoC mentors.
  • What will you do if you get stuck on your project and your mentor isn't around?
  • How do you propose you will be keeping the community informed of your progress and any problems or questions you might have over the course of the project?

Miscellaneous

  • We want to make sure that you can set up a development environment before the summer starts. Please send us a link to a screenshot of your Sugar development environment with the following modification: when you hover over the XO-person icon in the middle of Home view, the drop-down text should have your email in place of "Restart." See the image on the right for an example. It's normal to need assistance with this, so please visit our IRC channel, #sugar on irc.freenode.net, and ask for help.
  • What is your t-shirt size? (Yes, we know Google asks for this already; humor us.)
  • Describe a great learning experience you had as a child.
  • Is there anything else we should have asked you or anything else that we should know that might make us like you or your project more?

Please include the catagory tag at the bottom of your page:

[[Category:2012 GSoC applications]]

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