Just days after being accused of attempting to unleash potentially harmful Linux-related patents to find their way into the hands of patent trolls, Microsoft is now slated to announce its founding of a new foundation to support open source software.Just days after being accused of attempting to unleash potentially harmful Linux-related patents
to find their way into the hands of open-source-hating patent trolls,
Microsoft is now slated to announce its founding of a new foundation to
support open-source software.
According to foundation documents and published reports, the group will be known as the CodePlex Foundation
and will be led by Sam Ramji, Microsoft's senior director of Platform
Strategy. Ramji has been Microsoft's guy in the hot seat in dealing
directly with various factions of the open-source community, including
the Apache Software Foundation and the Eclipse Foundation. And Ramji
has proven his mettle in establishing relationships with those
organizations and others. Ramji will be the interim president of the
foundation.
According to one blog post:
Other interim board members of the new foundation are primarily from
Microsoft, at this point. They include Bill Staples, head of
Microsofts Internet Information Services team; Stephanie Boesch, a
Microsoft Program Manager for the .Net Framework; Miguel de Icaza, Vice
President of Developer Platform at Novell; Britt Johnston, a Microsoft
Product Unit Manager for Data and Modeling; and Shaun Walker,
Co-founder and Chief Architect of DotNetNuke.
The CodePlex Foundation's Website describes the group as "a
non-profit foundation formed with the mission of enabling the exchange
of code and understanding among software companies and open source
communities, launched today, September 10, 2009."
Moreover, the foundation's site reads:
"The CodePlex Foundation will complement existing open source
foundations and organizations, providing a forum in which best
practices and shared understanding can be established by a broad group
of participants, both software companies and open source communities.
Initial funding for the Foundation comes from Microsoft Corporation."
In addition, according to the site, the CodePlex Foundation is an
extension of the CodePlex brand established by Codeplex.com,
Microsoft's community development site where the company hosts
open-source, shared source and other technologies. The site hosts more
than 10,000 projects.
However, "The Foundation is solving similar challenges; ultimately
aiming to bring open source and commercial software developers together
in a place where they can collaborate," an FAQ on the CodePlex
Foundation site said. "This is absolutely independent from the project
hosting site, but it is essentially trying to support the same mission.
It is just solving a different part of the challenge, a part that
Codeplex.com isn't designed to solve."
| | Reader Comments: Microsoft Launches Open Source Foundation | | >>> Post your comment now!
| | BlurringSurely this is just an attempt to blur the line between the two factions. I do not believe for a moment that MS has its users or the Open source... Posted At: 09-15-09 By: Philipp Giddings | | | | | | | | | | | | if you can't beat em, join em!haha. So, Microsoft is realising that they cannot compete with opensource, So they are collaborating.....
Seems like a wise move.... Its another way... Posted At: 09-11-09 By: kaddy | | | | | | What next?Good grief, this is too weird.
What next? The Luddite Institute of Technology? The Dahmer Culinary Arts Institute? The Bush Center for Ethics in... Posted At: 09-11-09 By: Mike | | | | | | The End of Times"And the rivers will run red as with blood, for this is surely the herald of the coming of the Apocolypse"
In other words, and to paraphrase a... Posted At: 09-11-09 By: Jon Biddell | | | | | | >>> Post your comment now! | | | | | |
|
 |