Hi mentors,
The final submissions are due in less than 24 hours, so we're getting a lot of submissions now with people finalizing their draft proposal, or rushing to submit anything. I'm cutting back with feedback to students, since 1) they waited until the last minute and 2) they likely won't have time to fix any issues anyway. After the deadline, I'll go through and hide the ones that clearly don't belong, and we can begin discussions from there. We've got several strong candidates this year.
Hello everyone,
As the deadline for submission of proposal is over, how do we proceed further with the selection process? I can see that 27 proposals are already hidden, for the rest of them how would we narrow them down to two or three proposals and decide the the number of minimum and maximum slots?
Regards, Saksham
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019, 4:35 AM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
Hi mentors,
The final submissions are due in less than 24 hours, so we're getting a lot of submissions now with people finalizing their draft proposal, or rushing to submit anything. I'm cutting back with feedback to students, since 1) they waited until the last minute and 2) they likely won't have time to fix any issues anyway. After the deadline, I'll go through and hide the ones that clearly don't belong, and we can begin discussions from there. We've got several strong candidates this year.
Gsoc-mentors-2019 mailing list Gsoc-mentors-2019@phpmyadmin.net https://lists.phpmyadmin.net/mailman/listinfo/gsoc-mentors-2019
I don’t have a strong preference. Since ignored proposals and those marked with a star apply globally, so any proposal to use star will also appear starred in my view, we can begin to mark proposals that we think are quite good with a star.
Since the deadline for submitting code is in a few days, we will be able to go through and mark as ignored several more proposals that have not committed code, but will have to wait until Monday to do so.
Basically regardless of how exactly we accomplish it, what happens now discuss through comments on the Google interface which proposals are among the best, and then from there we narrow it down farther to those we wish to accept.
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 9:56 AM Saksham Gupta shucon01@gmail.com wrote:
Hello everyone,
As the deadline for submission of proposal is over, how do we proceed further with the selection process? I can see that 27 proposals are already hidden, for the rest of them how would we narrow them down to two or three proposals and decide the the number of minimum and maximum slots?
Regards, Saksham
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019, 4:35 AM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
Hi mentors,
The final submissions are due in less than 24 hours, so we're getting a lot of submissions now with people finalizing their draft proposal, or rushing to submit anything. I'm cutting back with feedback to students, since 1) they waited until the last minute and 2) they likely won't have time to fix any issues anyway. After the deadline, I'll go through and hide the ones that clearly don't belong, and we can begin discussions from there. We've got several strong candidates this year.
Gsoc-mentors-2019 mailing list Gsoc-mentors-2019@phpmyadmin.net https://lists.phpmyadmin.net/mailman/listinfo/gsoc-mentors-2019
Hello,
I think we can still narrow down many more proposals that are quite vague and won't be considered anyways. I think we could still narrow them down to about 10-15 good proposals worthy of being a GSoC project. This would ease the work that is to be done after Monday.
Regards
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 7:41 PM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
I don’t have a strong preference. Since ignored proposals and those marked with a star apply globally, so any proposal to use star will also appear starred in my view, we can begin to mark proposals that we think are quite good with a star.
Since the deadline for submitting code is in a few days, we will be able to go through and mark as ignored several more proposals that have not committed code, but will have to wait until Monday to do so.
Basically regardless of how exactly we accomplish it, what happens now discuss through comments on the Google interface which proposals are among the best, and then from there we narrow it down farther to those we wish to accept.
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 9:56 AM Saksham Gupta shucon01@gmail.com wrote:
Hello everyone,
As the deadline for submission of proposal is over, how do we proceed further with the selection process? I can see that 27 proposals are already hidden, for the rest of them how would we narrow them down to two or three proposals and decide the the number of minimum and maximum slots?
Regards, Saksham
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019, 4:35 AM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
Hi mentors,
The final submissions are due in less than 24 hours, so we're getting a lot of submissions now with people finalizing their draft proposal, or rushing to submit anything. I'm cutting back with feedback to students, since 1) they waited until the last minute and 2) they likely won't have time to fix any issues anyway. After the deadline, I'll go through and hide the ones that clearly don't belong, and we can begin discussions from there. We've got several strong candidates this year.
Gsoc-mentors-2019 mailing list Gsoc-mentors-2019@phpmyadmin.net https://lists.phpmyadmin.net/mailman/listinfo/gsoc-mentors-2019
Also, I think only Org Admins are allowed to star and ignore the proposals.
Regards
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 7:57 PM Saksham Gupta shucon01@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I think we can still narrow down many more proposals that are quite vague and won't be considered anyways. I think we could still narrow them down to about 10-15 good proposals worthy of being a GSoC project. This would ease the work that is to be done after Monday.
Regards
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 7:41 PM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
I don’t have a strong preference. Since ignored proposals and those marked with a star apply globally, so any proposal to use star will also appear starred in my view, we can begin to mark proposals that we think are quite good with a star.
Since the deadline for submitting code is in a few days, we will be able to go through and mark as ignored several more proposals that have not committed code, but will have to wait until Monday to do so.
Basically regardless of how exactly we accomplish it, what happens now discuss through comments on the Google interface which proposals are among the best, and then from there we narrow it down farther to those we wish to accept.
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 9:56 AM Saksham Gupta shucon01@gmail.com wrote:
Hello everyone,
As the deadline for submission of proposal is over, how do we proceed further with the selection process? I can see that 27 proposals are already hidden, for the rest of them how would we narrow them down to two or three proposals and decide the the number of minimum and maximum slots?
Regards, Saksham
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019, 4:35 AM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
Hi mentors,
The final submissions are due in less than 24 hours, so we're getting a lot of submissions now with people finalizing their draft proposal, or rushing to submit anything. I'm cutting back with feedback to students, since 1) they waited until the last minute and 2) they likely won't have time to fix any issues anyway. After the deadline, I'll go through and hide the ones that clearly don't belong, and we can begin discussions from there. We've got several strong candidates this year.
Gsoc-mentors-2019 mailing list Gsoc-mentors-2019@phpmyadmin.net https://lists.phpmyadmin.net/mailman/listinfo/gsoc-mentors-2019
Em sex, 12 de abr de 2019 11:55, Saksham Gupta shucon01@gmail.com escreveu:
Also, I think only Org Admins are allowed to star and ignore the proposals.
You can click on the I want to mentor button.
Regards
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 7:57 PM Saksham Gupta shucon01@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I think we can still narrow down many more proposals that are quite vague and won't be considered anyways. I think we could still narrow them down to about 10-15 good proposals worthy of being a GSoC project. This would ease the work that is to be done after Monday.
Regards
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 7:41 PM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
I don’t have a strong preference. Since ignored proposals and those marked with a star apply globally, so any proposal to use star will also appear starred in my view, we can begin to mark proposals that we think are quite good with a star.
Since the deadline for submitting code is in a few days, we will be able to go through and mark as ignored several more proposals that have not committed code, but will have to wait until Monday to do so.
Basically regardless of how exactly we accomplish it, what happens now discuss through comments on the Google interface which proposals are among the best, and then from there we narrow it down farther to those we wish to accept.
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 9:56 AM Saksham Gupta shucon01@gmail.com wrote:
Hello everyone,
As the deadline for submission of proposal is over, how do we proceed further with the selection process? I can see that 27 proposals are already hidden, for the rest of them how would we narrow them down to two or three proposals and decide the the number of minimum and maximum slots?
Regards, Saksham
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019, 4:35 AM Isaac Bennetch bennetch@gmail.com wrote:
Hi mentors,
The final submissions are due in less than 24 hours, so we're getting a lot of submissions now with people finalizing their draft proposal, or rushing to submit anything. I'm cutting back with feedback to students, since 1) they waited until the last minute and 2) they likely won't have time to fix any issues anyway. After the deadline, I'll go through and hide the ones that clearly don't belong, and we can begin discussions from there. We've got several strong candidates this year.
Gsoc-mentors-2019 mailing list Gsoc-mentors-2019@phpmyadmin.net https://lists.phpmyadmin.net/mailman/listinfo/gsoc-mentors-2019
Gsoc-mentors-2019 mailing list Gsoc-mentors-2019@phpmyadmin.net https://lists.phpmyadmin.net/mailman/listinfo/gsoc-mentors-2019
gsoc-mentors-2019@phpmyadmin.net