Dear all,

just a quick update to GSOC application of Pharo this year

- We have enough topics I guess. I already send a reminder on the
various mailing-list.
List of topics here:
https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-project-proposals/blob/master/Topics.st

We have to generate the html from the topics list and put the result
on the gsoc.pharo,org website. I ask Uko to have a look to this, but I
don't want to loose to much time on this. I was wondering if we should
transform the list as a Markdown document on github just to keep it
simple.

- Finish the 2016 Application and Organization profile on Google
website. The questions are a little bit different from 2015 and we
should complete them.
Please find below the answers to the questions right now.

I add in parenthesis, the number of words of each answers and the
maximum allowed.

Please us to refine our answers. We need to wrote "guidance for students".

Thank you.

==========================================================================

Why does your org want to participate in Google Summer of Code? (898/1000)

Supporting open-source projects is one of the most important
objectives of the Pharo community. Participating at GSoC will increase
the visibility of Pharo project efforts, thus favoring interactions
with other communities. We are also interested in providing
interesting projects to students allowing them to learn and have a fun
job for the summer.

We expect also to bring more people into our community. That's very
interesting as the Pharo community is trying to be innovation-driven
and more open minded than the Smalltalk community from which we have
evolved. We want people from other communities to join ours and we are
also interested in what is happening outside and to share experiences
or ideas. Fortunately for us, dynamic languages like Python, Ruby,
among others, enjoy increasing popularity. This is an excellent
opportunity to join, show and learn from and with other communities.

==========================================================================

How many potential mentors have agreed to mentor this year?

11-15

==========================================================================

How will you keep mentors engaged with their students? (668/1000)

We chose mentors from people who are long time in our community and
have proven to be reliable. Usually we try to match mentors with
projects that are important for themselves. This means that the mentor
has an own interest in the project that the student doing it. Also we
try to ensure that there is a co-mentor for every project who can
replace the main mentor if needed. Also it is very important for us to
keep a good record and expand the community, and in previous years we
even managed to organize our own "summer code" programs for a couple
of students, so in the worst case we will find a replacement from the
core part of the community, or the board itself.

==========================================================================
How will you help your students stay on schedule to complete their
projects? (886/1000)

As mentioned before we've already organized our own small "summer
code" programs, as usually we have more interested students than the
fundings that we can spend for them. However we acknowledge that
maintaining student's motivation is very important. We are a very open
and friendly community, and we encourage the students to take part on
the mailing list discussions from the beginning of their projects.
There is a specific pharo-users mailing-list more suitable for
beginners than the pharo-dev mailing-list.
Usually students get feedback and requests from the beginning of their
projects, and they have people interested in the prototypes as soon as
they are ready. From our experience having real users for the project
serves as the best motivation. Also our mentors try to maintain a
constructive and friendly discussion to ensure that the student enjoys
working on the project.

==========================================================================

How will you get your students involved in your community during GSoC?
(608/1000)

As mentioned above we encourage students to announce their status on
the mailing list as well as discuss questions on our Slack channel. We
also encourage them to write blogs about their project experience to
both promote themselves and give others an opportunity to familiarize
with the project more and share ideas between students. We are
organizing PharoDays every year (this year in Belgium, website:
http://pharodays2016.pharo.org) and we participate to the ESUG
(European Smalltalk User Group) conference in the end of each summer
and plan to invite the students of the best projects to present there.

==========================================================================

Has your org been accepted as a mentoring org in Google Summer of Code before?

Yes

==========================================================================

Which years did your org participate in GSoC?

- 2012
- 2010
- 2008
- 2007

==========================================================================

What is your success/fail rate per year?

- 2012: 10 projects pass / 3 fail
- 2010: 6 projects pass / 0 fail
- 2008: 5 projects pass / 0 fail
- 2007: 5 projects pass / 0 fail


==========================================================================

If your org has applied for GSoC before but not been accepted, select the years:

- 2015
- 2014
- 2013

==========================================================================

What year was your project started?

2008

==========================================================================

Short description of Pharo (166/180)

Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and IDE. We
innovate every part of the development experience to come up with the
best way to work with software.

==========================================================================

Long description of Pharo (1401/2000)

Pharo is a pure  object-oriented programming languagea and IDE.
Pharo's goal is to minify the gap between the state of your mind and
the functionality of your application. Whether you are writing code,
debugging it, inspecting an object, hacking the runtime or tweaking
the IDE there should be nothing that stops you from engaging the
action with ease and grace.

We work both on improving Pharo itself and on developing end user
applications in Pharo. Below you will see the highlights of most
prominent Pharo features.

### Simple & powerful language
No constructors, no types declaration, no interfaces, no primitive
types. Yet a powerful and elegant language with a full syntax fitting
in one postcard! Pharo is objects and messages all the way down.

### Feel a live environment
Feel the joy of having immediate feedback at any moment of your
development: Developing, testing, debugging. Even in production
environments, you will never be stuck in compiling and deploying steps
again!

### Amazing debugging experience
The Pharo environment includes a debugger unlike anything you've seen
before. It allows you to step through code, restart the execution of
methods, create methods on the fly, and much more!

### Pharo is yours
Pharo is made by an incredible community, with more than 80
contributors for the last revision of the platform and hundreds of
people contributing constantly with frameworks and libraries.

==========================================================================

Guidance for students on how to apply to your organization. Should
include any prerequisites or requirements. You may wish to include a
template or tips for their proposals.

(0/1500)

TBD

==========================================================================

-

Regards,
-- 
Serge Stinckwich
UCBN & UMI UMMISCO 209 (IRD/UPMC)
Every DSL ends up being Smalltalk
http://www.doesnotunderstand.org/

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