SoC Report 2015
Contact Name: Margherita Di Leo
OSGeo Google summer of Code participation in 2015
For Google Summer of Code 2015, the admins Margherita Di Leo and Anne Ghisla, and the mentors, selected 13 students, one for each project who provided mentoring support.
Key accomplishments
Our students this year were all successful, and developed the following projects:
- GDAL - Faza Mahamood: Integration of GDAL utilities into GDAL core library
- GRASS GIS - Matej Krejci: Improved Metadata for GRASS GIS
- gvSIG - Eva Rodríguez: Port Network Analysis Extension to gvSIG 2.x branch
- istSOS - Luca Ambrosini: Scalability for Big data processing for istSOS
- JGRASSTOOLS - Silvia Franceschi: Development of a simple 1D hydraulic model for JGRASSTOOLS
- MapServer - Samuel Lapointe: Add productivity tools to MapServer's ScribeUI
- Opticks - Tom Van den Eynde: Image Enhancement/Background Suppression for Opticks
- OTP - Nipuna Gunathilake: GTFS-Realtime validation tool for Open Trip Planner
- OSGeo-Live - Massimo Di Stefano: Integration of geospatial OSS in educational notebooks
- OSSIM - Martina Di Rita: OSSIM tool for DSM generation using tri-stereo and SAR imagery
- pgRouting - Sarthak Agarwal: New osm2pgrouting import tool to import OpenStreetMap (OSM) data in pgRouting
- PyWPS - Calin Ciociu: REST interface for PyWPS 4
- QGIS - Marcus Santos: QGIS - Multithread support on QGIS Processing toolbox
At the GSoC 2015 Results page, the students provided detailed info on their achievements and directions how to test the applications they developed.
Participation to GSoC Mentor Summit
The admins have participated in person to the Mentors Summit, held at Google's headquarter in Mountain View. A short report can be found here. This was an important occasion to meet with admins from other communities and exchange suggestions and views. It was also noted that a stronger cooperation with other like-minded orgs could be put in place.
Areas for improvement
OSGeo has participated to GSoC every summer since 2007, accepting 160+ students overall, from quite a few projects, both official OSGeo projects and endorsed guests. The rate of success has been overall quite high. However, there is always room for improvement. From discussion with mentors, they find it difficult to judge the actual ability of a student in the selection phase. From next year on, we propose that students demonstrate their ability by submitting a non trivial patch to the project they apply for. Another area to improve is to facilitate cross pollination among projects. We consider it a wonderful opportunity that the amazing software of OSGeo have the opportunity to interact to each other. Already this year we encouraged the development of cross projects by giving priority to them in assigning the available slots. We intend to do the same in the future.