I ended up closing around 6 of them:
- Send the Construct 2 wikipedia article upstream and get some feedback from the community and let them know what my plans are for it (https://www.scirra.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=156&t=104286&p=784029#p784029)
- Open source Halloween Touch (https://github.com/danShumway/Halloween-Touch)
- Decide on a new name for the AI (https://github.com/danShumway/WideEyes/issues/1)
- Decide on a license for the Piglet (https://github.com/danShumway/Piglet/issues/3)
- Get the basis's of our puzzles working in Python Math (https://github.com/danShumway/python_math/issues/22)
- Get a playable prototype up and running for Python Math (https://github.com/danShumway/python_math/issues/22)
Both Advanced FOSS and Humanitarian FOSS have been great experiences for me. They've kept me extremely busy, kept me writing a lot of blog posts (maybe slightly more than I wanted), and given me an opportunity to get more involved in FOSS communities and to get more used to the tools of the trade. I have no regrets over taking these courses, and I'm looking forward to interacting with RIT's FOSS community in the future. Thanks for reading so far!
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