Yahoo
Drupal gets 20 Google Summer of Code projects for 2007
BlogWow. 20 projects accepted for Drupal for the 2007 version of Google Summer of Code. Thanks to all the mentors and especially top GSoC wranglers Robert Douglass and Angie Byron for herding us through this application process.
Not only did this pay off in 20 projects, but the folks that help host drupal.org at the Oregon State University Open Source Lab *also* got two projects accepted which are actually working with Drupal: integrating the Google API into Drupal.
There are some really great projects planned out. Here are some of my favourites:
- RSS / Atom integration: I spent an hour or two with some of the guys from Achieve Internet last week on scoping some patches for the core aggregator code...there is lots of work to be done here, and I think we can get far, fast, by doing a bit of coordination
- Jabber / XMPP: yay! my two favourite communities continue to collide
- Scalability, Load Balancing, and High Availability: Vancouver local hadsie got in, which is great; Scott, want to work out of the Bryght offices for the summer?
- SMS Framework: it's clear that mobile users are continuing to become first class citizens of the web, but that SMS is a great tool for easily integrating into virtually any mobile environment; can I hear the phrase "Twitter clone"?
Yahoo! Canada On The West Coast
Blog
Yahoo! Canada paid a visit to us out here on the west coast last week and held an invite only event at the Opus Hotel in Yaletown. To sum up, the evening was all Panama: Yahoo's upgraded search engine advertising platform, built to improve their search advertising business. It was clear from the beginning that this trip to Vancouver, and their intention at this unveiling of the Panama Project, was concentrated around the sales and advertising. But in having an early peek at things, the interface has a fresh punch, there is some pretty sophisticated geotargeting, wait-time will be cut down to a mere 2 minutes (ish!) for ad approvals, and hey, generating more of a presence on the left coast is a *good* thing - this came up a few times...










