Blog Posts

    Community Doesn’t Come for Free

    by Wayne Beaton

    At Eclipse, we talk a lot about community. Developing a community is an important part of being an open source project. It is from a community of users, adopters, and contributors that a project draws strength and longevity. Without a community, an open source project is just a bunch of...

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    Last Week to Complete the Eclipse Community Survey

    by Anonymous

    This is the last week to complete the Eclipse Community Survey. The deadline for participation is May 13, 2011. Please take the time to complete the survey and tell us what you are doing with Eclipse. As an added incentive, to thank those that participate, we will randomly select 5...

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    Reaction and Questions for the Hudson Announcement

    by Anonymous

    Yesterday Oracle announced they have proposed to make Hudson an Eclipse project. Given the past history of the Hudson/Jenkins controversy, this was pretty big news. There has been a fair bit of press coverage and reaction from the community. I’d recommend reading Mik Kersten’s blog post about Tasktop’s participation in...

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    Hudson Now At Eclipse

    by Mike Milinkovich

    Today’s announcement that Oracle is proposing to move the Hudson project to the Eclipse Foundation is big news. It’s news because of the popularity of the project, its history and, let’s face it, the Hudson/Jenkins fork that happened a few months back. One of the key issues that split the...

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    500 Friends of Indigo

    by Anonymous

    The Indigo release train is a short 7 weeks away. Like last year, we are starting a new recruitment campaign for the Friends of Eclipse, called the Indigo 500. We want to recruit 500 Friends of Eclipse between May 1 and July 31. As a reminder, Friends of Eclipse are...

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    Intellectual Property Management

    by Wayne Beaton

    Most definitions of success for an open source project includes widespread adoption: while the value of the satisfaction you get from writing a great bit of code shouldn’t be undervalued, it’s a great deal more satisfying when something you’ve built gets used by hundreds, thousands, or millions of people. A...

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    Tracking Contributions

    by Wayne Beaton

    Eclipse projects are required to maintain a log of intellectual property (IP) contributions (an IP Log). This log keeps track of the third-party libraries that are directly referenced and/or distributed by the project, IP contributions made to the project by non-committers, the list of committers, and more. Fortunately, the IP...

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    Welcome Students!

    by Wayne Beaton

    Google Summer of Code 2011 is in full swing. Well, it’s almost in full swing: the accepted student proposals were announced today. Many of the students are still wrapping up their winter term exams, so the real fun can’t begin just yet. Today, we enter what Google refers to as...

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    Updated Eclipse Projects Landing Page

    by Wayne Beaton

    Last week, I unveiled a new Eclipse Projects Landing page. So far, the feedback I’ve received has been almost entirely positive. Frankly, I figured I’d get beat up over it being “too busy” or something, but I’ve received none of that. The only not-entirely-positive (though not strictly negative) feedback I...

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    Eclipse Projects: What’s New on April 20, 2011

    by Wayne Beaton

    We have three reviews are scheduled for the week of April 20-27/2011. You can provide feedback on these reviews on the channels indicated in the review documents, or on the eclipse.proposals forum. As is their tradition, the EGit and JGit projects have combined their respective 0.12.0 releases into a convenient...

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