FLOSS Fellowship Final Presentation
| What | Sarai In |
|---|---|
| When |
2008-08-09 10:00
to 2008-08-10 18:00 |
| Where | Seminar Room, CSDS |
| Add event to calendar |
|
Fellowship @Sarai:
FLOSS Fellowship Final Presentation
Date: 9th and 10th of August
Venue: Seminar Room, CSDS
The Independent FLOSS Fellowships enable programmers to research and develop different kinds of open source software-based applications. Typically, these are projects of concrete and practical value, especially for social and educational ends. They are also the kinds of projects that would not usually find support in formal, institutional or market-driven settings, either because of the intent / nature of the goal or because of the 'open' nature of the knowledge thus produced/created.
The FLOSS Fellowships seek to tie software developments into existing requirements for software within the social sector, and support the writing and dissemination of well-researched technical papers in key areas of research.
In 2007, Sarai had a total of nine fellowships awarded, in collaboration with the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation which funded six of the scholarships. Rajiv Gandhi Foundation (RGF) provided support for work in the specific area of computing, and localisation in five Indian languages, namely, Assamese, Hindi, Kashmiri, Oriya, and Urdu.
The summary workshop-presentation is a forum for fellows to present their work to the larger community. All are invited to take part in enriching discussions.
The Sarai- CSDS FLOSS Fellows 2007:
Sawood Alam, et al: Urdu localisation of GNOME, a FOSS desktop for computers.
Anand Kulkarni: Localisation of guides to OpenOffice, and other software in Marathi, and Urdu.
Sachin Joshi, Venkatesh Keri: Speech-to-text in Hindi, with application to other languages.
Rakesh Pandit, et al: Localisation of the GNOME desktop in Kashmiri.
Dr. N. M. Pattnaik, et al: Two fellowships for technical glossary in Oriya.
Ravishankar Shrivastava: Hindi localisation of a FOSS computer desktop.
C. S. Yogananda, and D. Shivashankar: Publishing in Indian languages using TeX, applicable to all major Indian languages.
Amitakhaya Phukan: Assamese localisation of GNOME, a FOSS desktop for computers.
FLOSS Fellowship Final Presentation
Date: 9th and 10th of August
Venue: Seminar Room, CSDS
The Independent FLOSS Fellowships enable programmers to research and develop different kinds of open source software-based applications. Typically, these are projects of concrete and practical value, especially for social and educational ends. They are also the kinds of projects that would not usually find support in formal, institutional or market-driven settings, either because of the intent / nature of the goal or because of the 'open' nature of the knowledge thus produced/created.
The FLOSS Fellowships seek to tie software developments into existing requirements for software within the social sector, and support the writing and dissemination of well-researched technical papers in key areas of research.
In 2007, Sarai had a total of nine fellowships awarded, in collaboration with the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation which funded six of the scholarships. Rajiv Gandhi Foundation (RGF) provided support for work in the specific area of computing, and localisation in five Indian languages, namely, Assamese, Hindi, Kashmiri, Oriya, and Urdu.
The summary workshop-presentation is a forum for fellows to present their work to the larger community. All are invited to take part in enriching discussions.
The Sarai- CSDS FLOSS Fellows 2007:
Sawood Alam, et al: Urdu localisation of GNOME, a FOSS desktop for computers.
Anand Kulkarni: Localisation of guides to OpenOffice, and other software in Marathi, and Urdu.
Sachin Joshi, Venkatesh Keri: Speech-to-text in Hindi, with application to other languages.
Rakesh Pandit, et al: Localisation of the GNOME desktop in Kashmiri.
Dr. N. M. Pattnaik, et al: Two fellowships for technical glossary in Oriya.
Ravishankar Shrivastava: Hindi localisation of a FOSS computer desktop.
C. S. Yogananda, and D. Shivashankar: Publishing in Indian languages using TeX, applicable to all major Indian languages.
Amitakhaya Phukan: Assamese localisation of GNOME, a FOSS desktop for computers.









