
On 22 Feb 2014 at 22:38, Tejas Nikumbh wrote:
Yep I would appreciate some mentor attention on this thread as well.
Tejas, The GSoC ideas page lists many precanned GSoC projects written for students by potential mentors. If none of those interest you, then it is YOU who must write a suitable GSoC project proposal and ideally it is YOU who must try to find a potential mentor here willing to mentor you. The explanation at the top of the GSoC ideas page is very clear about this. You should be aware that all student proposals go into a peer review stage where Boost members vote on proposals, ranking them to merit. Google then reviews our suggested ranking and can and do alter it to their own wishes. We are then allocated a certain number of GSoC slots by Google, and the top X ranked proposals get GSoC funding. If your proposal is not of a similar quality to the precanned proposals written by potential mentors already on the GSoC ideas page, the chances are that your proposal will not be highly ranked. This is why it is especially important to start as early as possible if you wish to propose your own GSoC project. No one will write a proposal for you - if they did, that proposal would already be on the GSoC idea page. I hope this helps. Niall --- Boost C++ Libraries Google Summer of Code 2014 admin https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/wiki/SoC2014