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February 2006 OpenSolaris Community NewsletterOverviewIn February, the OpenSolaris Charter was approved by Sun and the Community Advisory Board, the OpenSolaris Community started ramping up on the formation of development projects, more source and binary technology was released, a variety of contributions continue to be offered, some external code contributions have led to ARC cases, and source code management conversations are increasing. February was a short month but a busy one nonetheless. This newsletter attempts to offer a snapshot of the OpenSolaris Program and what's going on within the community. Because the project is large and diverse, we realize we can't capture everything in every issue. We are considering adding some new categories to the newsletter --- such as a "Community & Project Highlights" section, where one group would have some space to talk about any important development; an "Anecdote of the Month" section, where a community member could tell a brief personal story about some issue or experience; and a "Conferences" section, where community members can talk about their travels to various events around the world. If there are areas in which you feel you'd like to contribute to this publication, please feel free to suggest them. You can talk to us on the program-team mail list or the opensolaris-discuss mail list.
Community Status
On Wednesday February 8th, the OpenSolaris Community Advisory Board voted to approve the OpenSolaris Charter. Two days later, Sun Microsystems also approved the Charter, and the document was signed by Glenn Weinberg, vice president of Sun's Operating Platforms Group. The OpenSolaris Charter enfranchises the "OpenSolaris Governing Board (OGB) to manage and direct an OpenSolaris community in its efforts to improve upon and advocate in favor of OpenSolaris, so that the community may long endure." The current CAB members now comprise the initial OGB, and their first order of business is to create the OpenSolaris Constitution. These governance conversations have already begun, and the documents will be written, debated, iterated, and ratified in the open --- just as the Charter was developed in the open. OpenSolaris community members are encouraged to comment on any governance-related matter on the OGB's list.
OpenSolaris currently has 38 communities and 7 projects, with new communities and projects being discussed and proposed regularly on the mail lists. During the first few months of OpenSolaris, mostly communities formed. Now that the site has support for projects, however, most of the activity is around the formation of development projects. This trend is expected to continue. In February, one new community and five new projects were opened:
Our goal is to highlight a variety of contributions that community members are offering. Here are some contributions this month:
User Groups
Conferences OSBC, February
14th: Because the Open Source Business Conference is not a developer
gathering, OpenSolaris didn't have a significant presence there.
However, Sun sent several executives, and OpenSolaris was discussed in
multiple conversations. Jonathan Schwartz delivered the opening
keynote, and Tim Bray and Bill Vass participated on several panels. Jim
Grisanzio attended the conference and posted
some photos.
A guide for using OpenSolaris within operating system classes was produced by Michelle Olsen for presentation at SIGCSE (Special Interest Group for Computer Science Education) 2006 event. The document is available for download here.
Technical Status
SCM Work The preliminary evaluation phase for distributed SCM candidates ended on February 17th. Reports were submitted on multiple candidates, and discussion continues on multiple threads on the tools-discuss email alias: Monotone, Mercurial, and Bazaar. The next step is to try to eliminate some candidates to reduce the list. Once finalists are identified in early March, in-depth evaluation of those candidates will proceed.
OpenSolaris Community StatisticsFor
a variety of recent OpenSolaris statistics and graphics --- including
downloads, registered community members, referring domains, etc ---
please refer to the Community
Metrics Page,
which is updated every two weeks by the Marketing Community. The
presentation of the format is under review, all input is welcome.
Community growth is stable at approximately 130 new members per week,
and this is accompanied by increased volumes of other community
activity.
February's Newsletter ContributorsEditor: Linda BernalContributors: Eric Boutilier, Bonnie Corwin, Patrick Finch, Jim Grisanzio, Muppalla Sridhar. The OpenSolaris Newsletter is a community effort, and all community members are welcome to participate. Simply send news items to program-team mail list or the opensolaris-discuss mail list. The editor will keep track of contributions and list the names of participants in each issue. Also, the editorial team is looking for feedback on the content and format of the newsletter, so please feel free to suggest changes.
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