Public Lab Wiki documentation



Summer of Code programs

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Public Lab has received support for students to work on Public Lab software projects via Google's Summer of Code program -- 2019 is our sixth great year of open source coding with GSoC! In 2017 and 2018 we also joined the Rails Girls Summer of Code program, and in 2018 we participated in Outreachy.

This is a key way that we are able to develop our collaborative platform (this website) as well as other Public Lab coding projects.

We especially welcome contributions from people from groups underrepresented in free and open source software!

How to apply

Want to get involved? As a first step, we ask everyone to complete a “first-timers-only” issue, which you can find on our Welcome page at https://code.publiclab.org.

While it’s helpful to have some experience with the Git version tracking system, we have guides to help you go through this process, and will be there to help you get your code posted. Almost all of our code is in Ruby on Rails and JavaScript, so basic familiarity with these systems is a plus. We have a chatroom at https://publiclab.org/chat where you can get help pretty much any time.

Brainstorming project ideas

We kick off each season with a big brainstorm of ideas. You can find this year's discussion here:

https://publiclab.org/notes/warren/01-02-2019/brainstorming-for-summer-of-code-2019

Our Summer of Code Ideas Page will list the final brainstormed ideas that come out of this process.

Call for proposals

We'll then open up a call for proposals. You can see past years' call for proposals lists here; this year's will be very similar: https://publiclab.org/tag/call-for-proposals

The call for proposals will ask people to post their proposals using this template: https://publiclab.org/gsoc-application-template

We encourage people to leave comments, encouragement, tips, and questions on each others' proposals in a community fashion, and to be friendly and welcoming to one another!

How we work

Over recent years, we’ve steadily refined a workflow that helps new contributors get plugged into our community and code with a warm welcome, and aims to support building skills incrementally and cooperatively. We’re always looking for ways to improve, and welcome feedback!

Once you are comfortable with our workflow by completing a first-timers-only issue (see above) we’d like to ask that you compile your project steps into a planning issue, which you can learn about here. You can see examples here: https://github.com/publiclab/plots2/labels/planning

At this point, we recommend you begin going through the task list, creating a pull request like a mini-project for each task. Each one will ideally have tests, and we can help you develop these.

As you progress, we encourage contributors to grow as leaders by reviewing others’ pull requests, helping troubleshoot, and also taking small parts of your project to post as “first-timers-issues” for someone else. You can read more about these steps at https://publiclab.org/software-outreach and https://github.com/publiclab/plots2/labels/support.

Your code will be reviewed, supported and troubleshooted (troubleshot?) and potentially published to our live site as often as once a week, and you’ll be able to see it running and get feedback from people about it to inform your work.

Towards the end of your project, we’ll encourage you to take remaining pieces you’d like to see followed-up on in the future, and describe them with enough information for others to take up and complete. This could be in the form of “first-timers-only” issues, or “break-me-up” issues that list out steps that can be adapted into small stand-alone tasks.


Questions


Activities


Activities should include a materials list, costs and a step-by-step guide to construction with photos. Learn what makes a good activity here.


Mentoring

What does it mean to be a mentor?

Mentors check in with a student at least once per week roughly from May-August, and offer some project management guidance and encouragement... while relying on the plots-dev list and the @publiclab/reviewers group on GitHub to provide code-specific input, so that we share the burden of specific technical support.

This means that to be a mentor you don't necessarily need to know how to code -- we need mentors who know Public Lab's community and practices well, and who can encourage students to speak up when they get stuck, and to ask the community for input and testing of their work. Students often get stuck when they don't know how something should look, or how a feature might be used by the community -- contextual info!

If you're interested in being a mentor, email the developers list or jeff@publiclab.org -- and read over our software outreach resources to get an idea of how we work!

Some more resources on mentoring:


Communication

We do occasional chat or video sessions, and mentors rely on each other quite a bit, in the chatroom and on the plots-gsoc list.

Benefits

Our code contributor community is built on a commitment to mutual benefit -- we can’t create good software without welcoming in newcomers, and we are deeply invested in supporting contributors to learn new skills and grow as coders, designers, project leaders, and “cooperators”. Unlike many open source communities, much of our capacity is aimed at helping people become proficient coders, and to learn and apply principles such as code modularity, test-driven development, and more, as outlined at https://publiclab.org/software-outreach.

But we also seek to change coding culture by recognizing how important communication, mutual support, and affirmative and welcoming tone are. As part of this, we seek to improve ourselves and help contributors learn how to support one another, welcome in a diverse and inclusive community, and build a more positive and equitable society by doing things a little differently.


Past years


Updates

Title Author Updated Likes Comments
Design a new full-screen user interface for Infragram.org @radz_saini99 over 2 years ago 0
GSoC"proposal: MapKnitter Local @Fetian_Anas over 2 years ago 0
GSoC"proposal: Infragram.org video upload and full-screen UI @mehulchapaneri8988 over 2 years ago 2
GSoC"proposal: Full-screen UI and video upload @abhishekchauhan1509 over 2 years ago 4
GSoC'22 proposal: Refine User Interfaces across PublicLab.org @karishmagvanwari over 2 years ago 1
GSoC"proposal: Refine User Interfaces across PublicLab.org @LakG over 2 years ago 4
GSoC"proposal: Infragram.org full-screen UI and video upload @yravianand111 over 2 years ago 3
GSoC"proposal: Infragram.org full-screen UI and video upload @bhavyatewari_13_5 over 2 years ago 5
GSoC"22 Proposal: Refine User Interfaces across PublicLab.org @keshavraturi333 over 2 years ago 2
GSoC'22 Proposal: Refine User Interfaces across PublicLab.org @mittalparth22 over 2 years ago 3
GSoC 2022 proposal: Inragram.org full-screen UI and video upload @forcha over 2 years ago 7
Call for Proposals: Outreachy Summer 2022 @cess over 2 years ago 0
Call for Proposals: Outreachy Winter 2021 @mathildaudufo about 3 years ago 9
GSoC 2021 experience with Public Lab @waridrox over 3 years ago 1
GSoC 2021: Geographic Features Refinement - Final Report @barun1024 over 3 years ago 4
GSoC Report : Tag/Topic System Refinements @17sushmita over 3 years ago 3
GSoC 2021 : Translation System Refinement @ajitmujumdar25999 over 3 years ago 2
GSoC 2021 proposal: Education-related usability upgrades @Tanish over 3 years ago 6
GSoC!proposal: Filter out spam from comment. @lukoyedith over 3 years ago 7
GSoC!proposal: UX/UI QoL Improvements @eightballocto over 3 years ago 1
GSoC 2021 Proposal : Tag / topic system refinements @Manasa2850 over 3 years ago 18
GSoC proposal 2021 : Translation System Refinement @ajitmujumdar25999 over 3 years ago 5
GSoC 2021 Proposal: Legacy Code Deprecation @gauravsingh2699 over 3 years ago 9
GSoC!proposal: Translation System Refinements @YogeshSharma01 over 3 years ago 3