Jon,

There are still several volunteer mentors who didn't get slots, either.  If you go by Google's compensation amounts for Summer of Code, mentoring is supposed to take no more than 1/10 full time, but it may be better to hire multiple mentors to work on patches for Mediawiki's bugzilla queue while they each mentor 3 to 5 students.

I should mention that Sara Crouse encouraged me to support the California Chapter when I was trying to encourage (1) specific developments, before I realised the GSoC was coming up so soon, and (2) a National Science Foundation grant which could probably suppport at least six full-time chapter staff and more than ten contract programmers, including students:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Village_pump_(miscellaneous)/Archive_23&oldid=338511405

The Foundation was too busy to apply for that, but if the Chapter were to succeed in obtaining it, we could probably do everything that's been discussed, including annual Wikipedia Day conference hosting and Maker Faire presense, without costing the Foundation anything. And as you can see, it's completely congruent with the initial Chapter goals that Geoff set forth years ago.

In any case, whether we are able to secure external funding or not, chapters are expected to submit grant proposals per:

http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_chapters/WMF_grants

There are only 10 days remaining for the nominal proposal deadline, so I would like to have all of the possibilities we have been discussing in seperate chapter grant applications, and a proposed set of Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws ready by this time next week.

I will try to to that, because the only other outstanding action item I have is the 1-page instruction sheet handout for the MakerFairePedia notecards.

That reminds me, Jon, please don't forget the Maker Faire sign-up wikitable; that is almost a month late.

Regards,
James

On May 5, 2010 10:04 AM, "Jon Davis" <wiki@konsoletek.com> wrote:

For GSOC - So we start a chapter, then we can apply for extra slots - ok, fine.  But who's going to mentor them?  We need coders, preferably ones experienced in MediaWiki, to actually do the mentoring. 

I'm always happy to usurp more power given to me.  So... yay.

-Jon



On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 00:43, James Salsman <jsalsman@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Here are the names of ...

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