Blogs

La ciencia en España en 2010

El 2010 en España será un año duro en lo que a investigación se refiere. Los fondos destinados a la I+D+i se recortarán en al menos un 13% y serán muchos los proyectos en desarrollo que queden sometidos al olvido. Sin duda este será un duro varapalo para todos los jóvenes investigadores que perderán sus puestos de trabajo y en muchos casos se verán obligados a cambiar su vocación o incluso a emigrar del pais en busca de una sociedad que apueste por su trabajo.

 

My last cycle leading J!Research

Dear reader, if you are slightly surprised because of the title of my blog post, I have to confess I have used an old and well known strategy to catch your attention. Even though my routine and priorities have changed since I came to Europe to continue my studies, my cycle in J!Research has not finished yet and my motivation keeps as strong as in the beginning. I am concious that nothing is forever in this life and know that at some point in time I will have to hand over the control of the project to someone else. But stop talking about hypothetical situations; the real fact is that I am not going to leave J!Research in the short term, so J!Researchers ;-), I am afraid you will have to deal with my periodic mail spam for a while.

 

J!Research, after 1.0 release

J!Research project has grown incredibly since its conception as a Google Summer of Code 2008 project. This program finished for me with the release of 1.0 version which brought to us a very cool website and our own entry in Joomlacode and JED websites.

Things have changed a lot since that.  Users started posting issues in the tracker and offering translation work, like in my books of bazaar-styled development. Now, J!Research has been translated into German, Italian, Polish and French, while Bulgarian package is being developed. It is rewarding to know that your work is useful to others. Then a colleague from Austria, named Florian Prinz, joined the project. At first ,he was a user posting issues in the tracker, then he expressed his interest in collaborating with code becoming the most active developer and proposing excellent new ideas. In a few weeks, J!Research included a cool coverflow view for staff and support for financiers, cooperations and facilities. The best part came when a Spanish company decided to finance the development of a series of extra requirements for J!Research which effectively gave more sense to our work. We worked hard and as consequence to this effort, we are near the completion of the second major release of J!Research, 1.1 which will be accompanied by a new website, courtesy of Neri and a summary page of our users' websites. Finally, the team grew when Carlos Cámara, from Spain, decided to collaborate with sh404sef support and Spanish translation for 1.1 release.

Things have definitely changed!!!