Hi everyone,
2015 is the first year there's been a Google Summer of Code organization
for Ruby since 2009!
We've accepted 10 projects to Ruby GSoC this year. They are as follows:
- Breaking Changes and New Features for Bundler 2.0
- Bundler Plugin System
- Cap'n Proto
- Deadlock detection for Celluloid
- Filesystem monitoring support for nio4r
- Implement the new bundler index
- Maintain Bundler: a very popular and widely-used open source project
- Port oj (Optimized JSON) Ruby C Extension to JRuby
- Ruby JIT compiler
- Sidekiq: Improve Job and Worker Metrics
If you're interested in participating in or co-mentoring these projects,
please let me know!
There's a Google Group you can join here:
https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/rubygsoc
···
--
Tony Arcieri
SciRuby has their own distinct GSoC organization, along with Rails
···
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 9:19 PM, Ryan Davis <ryand-ruby@zenspider.com> wrote:
No sciruby? 
On Apr 27, 2015, at 16:37, Tony Arcieri <bascule@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi everyone,
2015 is the first year there's been a Google Summer of Code organization
for Ruby since 2009!
We've accepted 10 projects to Ruby GSoC this year. They are as follows:
- Breaking Changes and New Features for Bundler 2.0
- Bundler Plugin System
- Cap'n Proto
- Deadlock detection for Celluloid
- Filesystem monitoring support for nio4r
- Implement the new bundler index
- Maintain Bundler: a very popular and widely-used open source project
- Port oj (Optimized JSON) Ruby C Extension to JRuby
- Ruby JIT compiler
- Sidekiq: Improve Job and Worker Metrics
If you're interested in participating in or co-mentoring these projects,
please let me know!
There's a Google Group you can join here:
Redirecting to Google Groups
--
Tony Arcieri
--
Tony Arcieri
Is a little late to participate as a student, right?
···
On Tuesday 28 April 2015 02:12:54 Ryan Davis wrote:
> On Apr 27, 2015, at 22:28, Tony Arcieri <bascule@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> SciRuby has their own distinct GSoC organization, along with Rails
YAY! Thanks!
It's a little late to participate as a mentor, as well, but at least it's
possible to co-mentor a project.
SciRuby got 5 slots this year -- we have projects ranging from statistics
(implementation of Linear Mixed Models) to improvements to NMatrix (a
linear algebra library with dense and sparse multi-dimensional arrays).
There's also a gem similar to Python's Pandas and R's DataFrame, called
Daru (Data Analysis in Ruby).
It's going to be a great summer! 
···
-----
Carlos Agarie
+55 11 97320-3878 | @carlos_agarie
2015-04-28 9:06 GMT-03:00 Pedro José Piquero Plaza <gowikel@gmail.com>:
On Tuesday 28 April 2015 02:12:54 Ryan Davis wrote:
> > On Apr 27, 2015, at 22:28, Tony Arcieri <bascule@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > SciRuby has their own distinct GSoC organization, along with Rails
>
> YAY! Thanks!
Is a little late to participate as a student, right?
Ok thanks, I will try in another year.
I've never seen data analysis in Ruby, but I'm very interested with that so I
will see the project.
···
On Tuesday 28 April 2015 10:19:27 Carlos Agarie wrote:
It's a little late to participate as a mentor, as well, but at least it's
possible to co-mentor a project.
SciRuby got 5 slots this year -- we have projects ranging from statistics
(implementation of Linear Mixed Models) to improvements to NMatrix (a
linear algebra library with dense and sparse multi-dimensional arrays).
There's also a gem similar to Python's Pandas and R's DataFrame, called
Daru (Data Analysis in Ruby).
It's going to be a great summer! 
-----
Carlos Agarie
+55 11 97320-3878 | @carlos_agarie
2015-04-28 9:06 GMT-03:00 Pedro José Piquero Plaza <gowikel@gmail.com>:
> On Tuesday 28 April 2015 02:12:54 Ryan Davis wrote:
> > > On Apr 27, 2015, at 22:28, Tony Arcieri <bascule@gmail.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > SciRuby has their own distinct GSoC organization, along with Rails
> >
> > YAY! Thanks!
>
> Is a little late to participate as a student, right?