The Palisadoes Foundation’s GitHub projects are now being used as a part of the Software Architecture SWEN3120 course at the University of the West Indies, Mona Campus.

This video explains how to get started with Talawa and outlines many of the everyday challenges that software developers face in creating applications that users value.

This video is a recording of the final presentations that our GSoC 2021 students gave to our mentor team as part of their evaluations. It highlights the significant gains we made over the summer.

Rutvik is one of our 2021 Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students working on our Talawa project. He started participating in March, and was formally accepted as a GSoC student in May. He has been collaborating with other students and mentors on his various GitHub pull requests.

Welcome Rutvik!


Hi✋, I’m Rutvik Chandla, Computer engineering student from Gujarat, India.
I love to design new products and code them to reality. UI/UX and mobile development are my major interests. Started my development journey with Android. I’ve been working on Flutter for a few years.I’ve also dipped my toes into web-development with VUE JS.

The Thing which excites me the most is to solve or make things more efficient for day-to-day problems. Development is a way to solve those problems. Open source is always a fascination for me, I’ve contributed to few organizations and gratefully got a chance to work with the Palisadoes Organization in GSOC 21. Till now it has been a great learning experience from the mentors and building the Talawa project.

Hope to have a great journey ahead✨.

We highlight the many mentors who donate their time to assist students and other contributors to our open-source software repositories.

Troy Anderson

I am a Software Engineer at Digicel Group specializing in backend as well as cross platform mobile development and was a primary contributor in the development of the MyDigicel App. My primary role in Google Summer of Code (GSOC) entails planning and code reviews for the Talawa mobile app to ensure the code remains maintainable, testable and readable during it’s lifecycle.
Having had mentors not only during school but also throughout my professional career, GSOC is my way of paying those favors forward; empowering those whose position I was once in. The journey of learning never ends and I am happy to say I learn as much from students as they do from me; I believe that’s what GSOC and mentoring in general is all about.
Outside of work I enjoy traveling, cooking and the occasional amateur photography.


Brandon Chung

Brandon Chung is a Software Developer experienced in working with Flutter, Vue, SpringBoot, and other programming languages and frameworks. Brandon specializes in Web and Mobile App development, and has had a hand in developing a number of personal and enterprise grade applications. Brandon has held positions of student leadership at the University of Technology, most notably as the Student Chair of the IEEE UTech Student Branch. In his spare time, Brandon enjoys tutoring others in Software Development and playing video games.

Brandon volunteered for the first time with with the Palisadoes foundation in 2021 as a Google Summer of Code mentor.


Jason Gayle

I am a software developer specializing in full stack development, and however, I am mostly fluent in using frontend technologies such as React.js and Next.js. Moreover, I am also versed with UI design, and aim to delve into UX engineering as my career progresses.
For Google’s Summer of Code, I had primarily mentored for the Talawa-Admin project, whilst also occasionally assisting with the code review for the Talawa-API project. My role as a mentor has been to ensure that the quality of the contributions made to the project were of a high standard, whilst also providing the contributors with assistance whenever it was needed.

I am currently in my final year of studies for my Bachelors degree in Computer Science at the University of the West Indies and in my spare time, I enjoy practicing playing the guitar, and travelling to improve upon my photography.


Dominic Mills

Dominic is currently an Associate Software Engineer at RealDecoy–A business technology company that helps B2B and B2C organisations maximise their investments in e-commerce, site search and data insight. He has experience in the mobile and web development space and has previously been in a number of leadership roles: He was a group leader for the inaugural Lindau Sciathon; team leader for UNLEASH+ 2020; and is currently the team lead for one of the six funded AlumNode Projects in 2021. Additionally, he is a twice selected Leader of Tomorrow of the St. Gallen Symposium, and is the first Jamaican selected for the CERN Summer Student Programme. He is also an Associate Fellow at the Royal Commonwealth Society and has participated in many international programmes aimed at nurturing young scientists and thought leaders, such as the Think Summit Global Solutions, Heidelberg Laureate Forum and Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings.
Dominic finds mentoring a thoroughly enriching experience and always aims to learn as much from his mentees as they do from him. He is keen on helping others unlock their full potential as well as refining his skills in communication and teamwork.


Sagar Utekar

Sagar Utekar has been a key contributor to Palisadoes Foundation projects. He learned about because of his interest in the Google Summer of Code and quickly realized that most of our mentors were based in Jamaica while most of the students wanting to work on our projects were based in India.

Sagar lives in Maharashtra, India where he is currently working for the VMware Software India Pvt offices in Banglore.

He has a Diploma in Information Technology from the Institute of Petrochemical Engineering, Lonere, Raigad and a Bachelor’s in Computer Engineering from Pune Institute of Computer Technology.

He has over 3 years experience managing client-facing projects, troubleshooting technical issues, and working with engineering. This includes experience with:

  • Maintaining internet facing production-grade applications in Virtualized environments.
  • Writing software in Java, Python, Go, Node.js
  • Cluster deployments and orchestration technologies using Chef, Ansible, Docker, Kubernetes, Helm, OpenStack, Jenkins, KOPS.
  • Managing Kubernetes in large production environments.
  • Monitoring and alerting infrastructure using ELK, Prometheus, Grafana, Pagerduty, Slack, Datadog
  • Scalable networking technologies (e.g., Load Balancers, Firewalls) and web standards (e.g., REST APIs, web security mechanisms).
  • System administration tasks in Linux, Unix, or Windows and familiarity with standard IT security practices (e.g., encryption, certificates, key management).
  • Managing Kubernetes in large production environments.
  • Open source server software such as NGINX and Elasticsearch

How the Google Summer of Code changed our open source projects for the better


The Palisadoes Foundation offers an annual summer internship program called the Calico Challenge where software engineering students are offered summer internships to work on our open source projects hosted on GitHub under the guidance of an experienced IT professional mentor. Stipends are paid upon meeting pre-defined goals. Sponsorship has been provided by companies and individuals both in Jamaica and overseas. Calico started in 2016, and was inspired by the Google Summer of Code program (GSoC).

The Talawa Project Logo

Funding for Calico was hard to obtain in 2021, due to the pandemic, and we decided to suspend the program. But we didn’t give up hope, and applied to be a GSoC organization that year. We focused all our attention on our Talawa mobile application which was created to help community based organizations collaborate with their membership. These organizations could include religious groups, non-profit charities, social groups and in limited cases, businesses. ​We explained that we wanted to eventually host Talawa as a cloud service to help finance our education outreach.

With a five year track record of developing Talawa and other open source applications with over 30 Jamaican university students, we got in.

We didn’t expect to be awarded and were not monitoring our emails closely. However on the day of the announcement we noticed a flurry of activity on our various Talawa repositories. In a single day there were dozens of requests from programmers to have their contributions accepted and merged into our software. These “pull requests” used to be rare because our projects were small, and so we decided to investigate. We were elated to get the award, but then what?

It was pandemonium. There were many unforeseen challenges:

  1. Project activity skyrocketed overnight with the following statistics taken a week after the GSoC announcement. A “fork” occurs when a software developer copies a project to their own private account so that they can work on modifications that will then be merged back into the original project through a “pull request”
    • Project Talawa: 132 forks, 672 pull requests
    • Project Talawa API: 77 forks, 230 pull requests
    • Project Talawa Admin: 12 forks, 15 pull requests
  2. We had very little documentation on how to use the software, desired features, procedures for contributing code and our overall vision.
  3. The software was buggy and there wasn’t any automated software testing to make the operation smoother.
  4. A large number of mentors needed to be found to guide students.
  5. Students were constantly asking questions on our Slack channel, a service similar to WhatsApp.

A plan was quickly put in place.

  1. We placed a call for mentors on every tech WhatsApp group we knew. Within days we had Jamaican IT professionals monitoring the pull requests.
  2. Minor changes to the software, such as fixing typos, were rejected.
  3. Pull requests had to be tied to documented GitHub issues (the equivalent of trouble tickets and feature requests) that explained the aim of the proposed software changes.
  4. All GitHub issues created by software developers were automatically tagged as being “unapproved”.
  5. Only Palisadoes mentors could assign the issues to software developers and remove the “unapproved” tag.
  6. Pull requests were only reviewed on approved GitHub issues.
  7. We only accepted GitHub issues to fix bugs while we worked on a strategy to rewrite the code to be more reliable. This is what is also called a “code freeze”.
  8. GitHub issues for new “feature requests” were added to the list of things to do for the code rewrite during the code freeze.
  9. We created new GitHub issues to develop ways to improve our automated testing and code formatting. These were assigned to potential GSoC students.
  10. We created YouTube videos outlining the various Talawa projects to help answer many of the questions we were receiving.
  11. After the videos were created we held a series of webinars to guide students through the projects and the GSoC application process.
  12. Mentors created a single documentation site for all Talawa projects.
  13. We started a series of structured weekly strategy meetings with mentors to coordinate our activities. The meetings were minuted and the results distributed to all members so they would always be up to date in case they missed a session.
  14. Our Slack channels were reworked to have separate channels to discuss each project. Other channels dedicated to automatically announce newly created GiHub issues and pull requests were established to help alert potential contributors to opportunities to participate in improving our code. We also created a general discussion channel and a closed mentor channel as a quick means of communication.
  15. Palisadoes Foundation volunteers were constantly asked questions by globally dispersed students which disrupted the volunteers’ other activities such as their regular jobs, and sleep. We created a protocol whereby students were redirected to mentors assigned to the relevant projects and alerted students to the best times of the day (office hours) to contact mentors about questions.
  16. A lot of time was spent setting an inclusive culture within the projects that discouraged bad behavior, such as flaming (hostile and insulting remarks), lone wolves and closed collaboration groups.
  17. We also tried to make everyone have an equal chance of being accepted into GSoC. This extended beyond our open documentation and YouTube videos. We also converted many of our responses to private queries from students into public statements soon thereafter.
  18. We realized that many of our student applicants were scattered across the globe, but our mentors were mainly based in Jamaica. Mentors in a range of timezones were required. We were fortunate to get a volunteer based in India to help us have coverage around the clock to monitor activity on GitHub.
  19. A formal communication plan had to be created. We scheduled email campaigns, blog posts and social media announcements so that we would have new content about our experiences distributed each month so that we would remain relevant in the eyes of our community.
  20. We created a software development workflow where all changes were tested in a dedicated “development” area. This development code was only migrated to our production “master” branch when it was deemed to be stable after numerous tests.
  21. We encouraged students to always create GitHub issues on the GitHub website so that everyone could get an idea of the outstanding work that needed to be done. This greatly helped in setting our coding priorities.
  22. We also created career sessions with mentors to provide guidance to students on how to handle some of the foreseeable challenges in their careers.

The experience has been both exhilarating and frightening. We kept our cool and focused on a rapid succession of incremental changes that have created a revolution in the way we handle our projects.

Special thanks to all our mentors around the world.

  • Troy Anderson
  • Xavier Bryson
  • Brandon Chung
  • Jason Gayle
  • Shannon Henry
  • Shannika Jackson
  • Dimitri Johnson
  • Jordan Jones
  • Jordan Liu
  • Phillip Llewellyn
  • Dominic Mills
  • Deandrew Moore
  • Delton Phillips
  • Laurell Seville
  • Gareth Thomas
  • Tahj Thompson
  • Sagar Utekar
  • Ranil Wallace

Sagar Utekar has been a key contributor to Palisadoes Foundation projects. He learned about because of his interest in the Google Summer of Code and quickly realized that most of our mentors were based in Jamaica while most of the students wanting to work on our projects were based in India.

Sagar lives in Maharashtra, India where he is currently working for the VMware Software India Pvt offices in Banglore.

He has a Diploma in Information Technology from the Institute of Petrochemical Engineering, Lonere, Raigad and a Bachelor’s in Computer Engineering from Pune Institute of Computer Technology.

He has over 3 years experience managing client-facing projects, troubleshooting technical issues, and working with engineering. This includes experience with:

  • Maintaining internet facing production-grade applications in Virtualized environments.
  • Writing software in Java, Python, Go, Node.js
  • Cluster deployments and orchestration technologies using Chef, Ansible, Docker, Kubernetes, Helm, OpenStack, Jenkins, KOPS.
  • Managing Kubernetes in large production environments.
  • Monitoring and alerting infrastructure using ELK, Prometheus, Grafana, Pagerduty, Slack, Datadog
  • Scalable networking technologies (e.g., Load Balancers, Firewalls) and web standards (e.g., REST APIs, web security mechanisms).
  • System administration tasks in Linux, Unix, or Windows and familiarity with standard IT security practices (e.g., encryption, certificates, key management).
  • Managing Kubernetes in large production environments.
  • Open source server software such as NGINX and Elasticsearch

Dominic is currently an Associate Software Engineer at RealDecoy–A business technology company that helps B2B and B2C organisations maximise their investments in e-commerce, site search and data insight. He has experience in the mobile and web development space and has previously been in a number of leadership roles: He was a group leader for the inaugural Lindau Sciathon; team leader for UNLEASH+ 2020; and is currently the team lead for one of the six funded AlumNode Projects in 2021. Additionally, he is a twice selected Leader of Tomorrow of the St. Gallen Symposium, and is the first Jamaican selected for the CERN Summer Student Programme. He is also an Associate Fellow at the Royal Commonwealth Society and has participated in many international programmes aimed at nurturing young scientists and thought leaders, such as the Think Summit Global Solutions, Heidelberg Laureate Forum and Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings.
Dominic finds mentoring a thoroughly enriching experience and always aims to learn as much from his mentees as they do from him. He is keen on helping others unlock their full potential as well as refining his skills in communication and teamwork.

We are pleased to announce the GitHub Externship students who will be working with the Palisadoes Foundation this summer.

The GitHub Externship is a 90-day fellowship program for third or pre-final year students of GitHub Campus Partner schools. The GitHub Externship program is about learning, preparing students to be market ready, strengthening industry-academia relation, and giving practical experience to students. This program aims to provide innovative solutions to the partner organizations on their existing challenges as well as helping organization identify real talent that can be employed by the organizations at later stages.

We are grateful to GitHub for the opportunity to allow us to continue our work on Talawa, our mobile app that helps community organizations manage their membership.

Enough talk, let’s learn about the awardees!


Aditya Birangal

I’m Aditya Birangal from Pune, India leading the Google Developer Student Club to help students grow their knowledge to be better developers & build solutions for local businesses and their community.

I’m extremely passionate about Technology. I’m a #SelfTaught developer and makes Android, iOS & Web Apps using #Flutter & deploy them on #Cloud. I spend a lot of my time in learning, innovating & developing new tech stuff.

Favorite Quote: “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life.” Steve Jobs

Follow Aditya on: Linkedin, Github or his Portfolio Website

Aditya has been collaborating with other students and mentors on his various GitHub pull requests.


Muskan Modi

Hello! My name is Muskan Modi and I am an active open source contributor. I love dogs 🙂 and enjoy contributing to the exciting technological advances.

I have worked in almost every technical field from Cloud Computing, DevOps to Big Data and Machine Learning. I am a final year student at the University of Petroleum and Energy Studies, Dehradun, India. Since my childhood, I have always been eager to learn something new whether it is skating, painting, or coding.

With the Palisadoes Foundation it feels like every day we are learning something new. Happy open source contributing!

Muskan has been collaborating with other students and mentors on her various GitHub pull requests.


Saumya Singh

Namaste, I am Saumya Singh an ordinary girl with a bag full of extraordinary dreams to learn, explore, be happy & achieve a lot more.

Technically, I enjoy working in the field of Web Development. I strive to be a better Web Developer daily. Mainly working on the front end and aiming to be a Full Stack developer. Besides, I am curious about Machine Learning and deep dive into the world of Computer Vision. I have participated in various National level hackathons and I am part of the Women’s community in tech too. I am blessed that my team is a grand finalist of the National level technical event Toycathon’2021, and have also applied for a patent in the same project.

I am an avid book reader The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand is one of the best novels I have read, I also like reading Dan Brown novels. Writing soothes my soul, I have a domain on WordPress where I express my thought at times. Swimming, dancing, and sometimes talking to plant (😬) gives me joy. When I am working, learning, or coding, I like to listen to Jazz.

I believe “Life is Learning & Learning is Life” when anyone lives by this motto, they have the curiosity to look forward to something and a vision to learn new things with a positive attitude.

Let’s connect here: LinkedIn , GitHub

Keep Smiling. Thank you.

Saumya has been collaborating with other students and mentors on her various GitHub pull requests.

See the new look of our Talawa mobile app!

​Talawa was created to help community based organizations collaborate with their membership. These organizations would include religious groups, non-profit charities, social groups and in limited cases, businesses. ​

Though software applications exist for these types of organizations they assume their memberships are fully literate and have access to email. We wanted to create a system that would work for countries with similar technology and education challenges as Jamaica. ​

Talawa has three main components. A mobile application with social media features, a web based portal to be used by the organization’s administrative team, and finally an API providing access to data and features. ​​

The Palisadoes Foundation wants to eventually host Talawa as a cloud service to help finance its education outreach. ​

Talawa’s main features for 2021 include: ​

  • User news feed
  • Event calendars with lightweight project management
  • Group chats
  • Member notifications
  • Donation acceptance
  • Service provider level multi-organization capability
  • Plugin support for administration services such as billing

We are pleased to announce the Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students who will be working with the Palisadoes Foundation this summer.

Since 2005 Google has sponsored summer internships for students to work on open source projects around the world. Stipends are paid upon meeting predefined goals under the guidance of a software engineering mentor.

We are grateful to Google for the opportunity to allow us to continue our work on Talawa, our mobile app that helps community organizations manage their membership.

Enough talk, let’s learn about the awardees!


Rutvik Chandla

Rutvik is one of our 2021 Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students working on our Talawa project. He started participating in March, and was formally accepted as a GSoC student in May. He has been collaborating with other students and mentors on his various GitHub pull requests.

Hi, I’m Rutvik Chandla, Computer engineering student from Gujarat, India.

I love to design new products and code them to reality. UI/UX and mobile development are my major interests. Started my development journey with Android. I’ve been working on Flutter for a few years.I’ve also dipped my toes into web-development with VUE JS.

The Thing which excites me the most is to solve or make things more efficient for day-to-day problems. Development is a way to solve those problems. Open source is always a fascination for me, I’ve contributed to few organizations and gratefully got a chance to work with the Palisadoes Organization in GSOC 21. Till now it has been a great learning experience from the mentors and building the Talawa project.

Hope to have a great journey ahead.


Yasharth Dubey

Yasharth is one of our 2021 Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students working on our Talawa project. He started participating in March, and was formally accepted as a GSoC student in May. He has been collaborating with other students and mentors on his various GitHub pull requests.

Hey guys, I am Yasharth Dubey. A 2nd-year Computer Science Student from India, I am currently pursuing my bachelors from the Indian Institute of Information technology Dharwad. I am a competitive programmer along with a developer. I am a regional finalist in ICPC 2019, 6:star: on Codechef and Pink Band Candidate master on code forces. I am a very keen contributor to open-source programs. This interest in the opensource brought me to the GSoC as it Is the Olympics for opensource. I searched for some familiar Tech-stacks and while I was searching, I found The Palisadoes Foundation there. The thing which took my attention as it was the only foundation that has put the label of Social Good in the description. That zeal for social good brought me here. After finding the culture and nature of every mentor here I was happy to choose The Palisadoes Foundation for my GSoC journey. Hope I will be able to contribute in the future as well. Thanks to Peter Harrison Sir for allowing us to serve the social good by this organization’s motive.


Sumitra Saksham

Sumitra is one of our 2021 Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students working on our Talawa project. He started participating in March, and was formally accepted as a GSoC student in May. He has been collaborating with other students and mentors on his various GitHub pull requests for Talawa and the Talawa API backend.

I am Sumitra, a graduate student from the Indian Institute of Technology, Dhanbad. I have completed my bachelors in Petroleum Engineering. During my pre-final year of college, I was introduced to backend development in Nodejs and GraphQL for an Order Management System. Since then, I have devoted myself to technology. I love to dig deep into problems and solve them with technology. My specialities include problem-solving, app optimization, user interface design, user experience design, database design, continuous integration, and continuous delivery of code. I was selected as one of the Student Software developers in GSoC 2021 to contribute to Talawa App and Talawa Backend (the project under palisadoes foundation). This is the first time I am working for an open-source organization. The amount of growth that I witness here has been phenomenal. I began to ask myself many questions related to scalability, project structure, database design, encryption, and clean code, which helped me grow my knowledge base. My intention in life has always been to build something people love. I am sure that the work we are doing here will help the community to grow and make this world a better place.


Utkarsh Shendge

Utkarsh is one of our 2021 Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students working on our Talawa project. He started participating in March, and was formally accepted as a GSoC student in May. He has been collaborating with other students and mentors on his various GitHub pull requests.

My name is Utkarsh Shendge and I am an undergraduate student at Vishwakarma Institute of Technology, pursuing Computer Science and Engineering as my Major. Currently, I am working as a Google Summer of Code student developer with Palisadoes Foundation. And my primary focus is on improving the UI/UX of the Talawa App. I always wanted to build applications that help people on a global scale and I am really happy that I am doing the same by working with other student developers under the guidance of mentors.

I have a keen interest in App development, Machine Learning and I love studying Advanced Algorithms. My primary focus and inspiration for my studies are software algorithms. I have 2 years of experience in app development and I have been working with the flutter framework for more than 18 months. I have been a Data Structures and Algorithms tutor and completed a few freelancing gigs.


Ritik Kumar Srivastava

Ritik is one of our 2021 Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students working on our Talawa project. He started participating in March, and was formally accepted as a GSoC student in May. He has been collaborating with other students and mentors on his various GitHub pull requests.

Hello, my name is Ritik Kumar Srivastava. I am currently a senior at Galgotias University, standing under the course B.tech(Hons) in Computer Science and Engineering with Specialization in Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning.

On my first interaction with “The Palisadoes Foundation” under the open-source contribution program, I had this opportunity to showcase my skills in an open-source application. It was necessary for me to get into GSoC 2021 to boost my skills perspective but also an opportunity to help my family financially.

Every moment from March 12, 2021 has been memorable and taught me a lesson each day that helped me grow more. This opportunity was only made possible with the combination of passionate mentors and Peter Harrison Sir.

I aimed to give Talawa some of the features like:

  • Donations to an organization via users.
  • Well-defined authentication flow.
  • Migration of code base.
  • Invitation to other users registered/unregistered.
  • App showcase on the first launch.

I find myself fortunate to have so many good friends and colleagues because of there contribution to my learning is immense. I don’t have a laptop to be true of my own whatever I learned and gained is; all that was not possible without their help.

I am currently watching iOS development tutorials. Have a keen interest in mobile app development. I am also interested in the automation of tasks via python automation, UiPath or automation through development boards. Being an AI and ML enthusiast, I always try to learn new things and implement them in my free time.