The Squeak Project

Preferred license: MIT license
The Squeak Project is an organization dedicated to support Squeak's development. Squeak is a Smalltalk dialect and a programming environment created by many of the original Smalltalk authors. Its first edition was released in 1996, and it's currently at version 3.9, with a 3.10 version under development. It has spawned many related projects, both non-commercial (such as Squeakland http://www.squeakland.org/, Croquet http://www.croquetproject.org/, Scratch http://scratch.mit.edu/, Sophie http://sophieproject.org/) and commercial (Plopp http://planet-plopp.com/, DabbleDB http://www.dabbledb.com, CMSBox http://www.cmsbox.ch/). It's also the main developer platform for the Seaside web framework. The Squeak Project takes care of all the bureaucratic tasks for the Squeak community (providing funding for server and connectivity costs, etc.); all the other tasks and problems, including technical ones, are handled by the community. By partecipating as the Squeak Project, instead of simply Squeak as we did in the 2007 edition of the GSoC, we aim to muster a larger involvement from the various communities related to Squeak. The Squeak Project will be joining the Software Freedom Conservancy in the near future.
Actual source code produced by the student participants in Google Summer of Code™ for The Squeak Project can be found here.
 
Current Projects
by Luigi Panzeri, mentored by Lukas Renggli
by Francois Stephany, mentored by Kenneth Lee Causey
by Gwenaël Casaccio, mentored by Stéphane Ducasse
by Phua Khai Fong, mentored by Aik-Siong Koh
by Cédrick Béler, mentored by Klaus D. Witzel