And because I forgot the links:
1.
2. Get
3. Write a
4. Decide :)
~Lincoln
On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 10:50 PM, Lincoln Baxter, III <
lincolnbaxter(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Vlad!
Welcome, and thank you for taking interest in our project!
We are excited to participate in Google Summer of Code 2012, and it's our
pleasure to be able to present you with interesting experiences!
Regarding getting started - the first thing I would do is try out
(install) Forge, play around with the interface to get a feel for how
things work, possibly work through the basic getting started tutorial.
Next, I would try to write a simple Forge Plugin, then you can decide
which you are more interested in, RHQ, or Git "Undo". Personally I love the
idea of the second, and it would be a huge technical accomplishment!
Bragging rights for sure.
Welcome to the Forge GSoC!
~Lincoln (and the Forge community!)
On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 2:37 PM, Vlad Bogolin <vladbogolin(a)gmail.com>wrote:
> Hi,
> I am Vlad Bogolin, a 2nd year student at Polytechnic University of
> Bucharest, Computer Science Department. I would like to participate at GSoC
> 2012 this being my first attempt at GSoC.
> I would be interested to create a Java application for JBoss. After
> looking on the idea page I think the most suitable applications for me
> would be to Implement a Forge plugin to create RHQ plugins or Implement a
> Plugin to add "Undo" functionality to Forge.
> I can say that I am quite familiar with Java. I have developed some small
> projects and now I am developing a team project based on the Ants game from
> AIChallange for school purpose. As it comes to Git I am also familiar with
> it but I mostly used EGit
>
> I would really appreciate if I could be pointed to some resources or some
> small tasks in order to make a proper idea about these projects and to give
> it a try.
> Thank you,
> Vlad Bogolin
> _______________________________________________
> forge-dev mailing list
> forge-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/forge-dev
>
>
--
Lincoln Baxter, III
http://ocpsoft.org
"Simpler is better."