Thanks Myriam. It'll really help a lot.

Cheers,
Roshan Kumar


On Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 10:29 PM, Myriam Schweingruber <myriam@kde.org> wrote:
Hi Roshan,

On Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 2:09 PM, Roshan Kumar <roshan.techie48@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am been using KDE for last 4 years. And meanwhile I came to know about
> many useful tools on KDE.
>
...
> Following are the projects which I have worked upon till today:
>
> 1. Linux Remote Server Monitoring Tool using PHP and Shell Scripting - A web
> application through which we can monitor the cpu/memory status of many
> servers at a time.
>
> 2. Dynamic Hand Gesture Recogition using OpenCV - It recognizes the hand
> gestures to do several tasks on the system.
>
> 3. Comparison of various soft computing approaches using for face
> recognition like PCA, LDA, ANN, SVM, Baysian Networks
>
> 4. Interactive Spoken Dialogue System using CMU Sphinx Speech Engine - It is
> a chatterbot which takes input in the form of human voice and replies again
> with the human voice.
>
> 5. Diagram Based Plagiarism Check - Plagiarism Check using comparison of the
> flow diagrams.
>
> 6. Automated UI Testing workflow for an Android Application using Robotium
>
> 7. Automatic Targeting System using OpenCV - It can spot and hold the target
> while system being in very high speed.
>
> and several other tools using java like Online Election System, Lost Letters
> and Articles Reconciliation System etc.
>

All this rings a bell, didn't you apply last year and the year before already?


Anyway, here comes the mandatory welcome mail for potential students:



GSoC 2013 has only just been announced and we are currently creating
the list of ideas for GSoC which will be available as soon as KDE is
accepted as a participating project.

In the mean time I strongly suggest you read the KDE guide [1] first
and get familiar with KDE and its various projects as much as
possible. To be able to select a particular project you need to be
quite familiar with it, so make sure you learn as much as possible in
the mean time, mostly by using KDE and reading the documentation of
the various projects.

Getting not only familiar with the project but also get some first
coding experience and getting acquainted with the KDE developers is a
strongly recommended, so please have a look at the Junior Jobs in
Bugzilla [2]

You should also subscribe to the KDE SoC mailing list [3] where all
announcements regarding GSoC will be made.

Some important information regarding KDEs GSoC planning can be found
on the KDE Community wiki [4]

[1] http://flossmanuals.net/kde-guide/
[2] http:/kde.org/jj
[3] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-soc
[4] http://community.kde.org/GSoC

If you have never worked on Free Software before, here is some
important background information as well as some additional reads we
recommend:

About Free Software: [5]
How to ask questions and communicate: [6], [7] and [8]
Some basic mailing list and IRC etiquette: [9] and [10]

[5]: http://www.fsf.org/about/what-is-free-software
[6]: http://catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
[7]: http://www.shakthimaan.com/downloads.html#i-want-2-do-project-tell-me-wat-2-do
[8]: http://whathaveyoutried.com/
[9]: http://www.kde.org/support/mailinglists/
[10]: http://tldp.org/HOWTO/IRC/beginners.html


Regards, Myriam


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