Community

Exceptional Circumstances

Thursday, August 9, 2012 - 11:12 by Wayne Beaton
Sometimes open source projects lose steam. This is the way of things. Developers get pulled off projects. Sometimes the resulting gaps get filled naturally. Diversity in a project is one way of making sure that gaps fill naturally: if the developers from one organization lose interest, then developers from an...

Some Juno Numbers

Tuesday, June 26, 2012 - 17:07 by Wayne Beaton
Seventy-two (72) projects signed up to participate in the Juno Simultaneous Release. Some of these projects include one or more subprojects with their participation. Effectively, this means that some subprojects have joined their parents in the release (joint IP Log and release review). In many cases, the related projects share...

Transparent and Open

Tuesday, May 1, 2012 - 13:58 by Wayne Beaton
The term “open and transparent” rolls off your tongue. While somewhat more cumbersome to say, I tend to prefer reversing the order: “transparent and open”. I prefer this because I believe that transparent precedes open; and far more open source projects are transparent than are open. In my experience most...

Google Summer of Code 2012 Students announced!

Monday, April 23, 2012 - 16:00 by Wayne Beaton
The Google Summer of Code 2012 students have been announced, and I’m very happy to report that Google selected twelve exceptional student project proposals for the Eclipse Community. The Eclipse Communication Framework (ECF) project picked up two student projects: Future enhancements for Salvo Newsreader, and OSGi Remote Services Testing framework...

Diversity in Open Source Projects

Wednesday, March 14, 2012 - 21:51 by Wayne Beaton
I’ve been talking a lot about diversity lately. There are, of course, different kinds of diversity; but when I talk about diversity, I tend to mean diversity in the organizations contributing to an open source project: multiple organizations from different parts of the industry working together. Doug tweeted recently on...