Stratocaster

Rich Sands' blog. Thoughts on community development, strategy, gardening, food, and whatever else comes to mind.


20080319 Wednesday March 19, 2008

The Challenge of The Challenge

At FOSDEM this year, Mark Wielaard talked about how the Free Java community is first and foremost about real people doing real software - and among those real people, the folks who were in the Free Java devroom at the conference. I agreed with him when I took a few minutes to pump up the OpenJDK Community Innovators' Challenge to the assembled developers, only I added that the Challenge is about real people doing real software - for real money. $175,000 for OpenJDK and a cool $1 Million total for six communities participating in Sun's Open Source Community Awards initiative to be precise.

I was a little nervous at FOSDEM, with only a couple weeks until the proposal phase of the Challenge closed, and only a small handful of proposals received. I should have known better! At the last minute - well, really the last few days - an avalanche of proposals came pouring in from community members keen on contributing to the OpenJDK project and on being recognized for their contributions. An amazing 18 proposals were received, many of which were very meaty, useful and sophisticated ideas on new APIs and language features, on media, graphics, and sound components, on porting, on new languages for the JRE, and on the guts of the VM itself. It has been so gratifying to see the excitement and enthusiasm for Java technology and for the OpenJDK project. Sure we have our problems - they're well documented, and not unexpected for a project of this magnitude with so much technical and cultural history behind it. But overall, the community is coming together, working out what is important, and starting to gather momentum around some key efforts.

As a judge for the Challenge, I watched as some of Sun's best engineers evaluated these proposals and wrestled with understanding and prioritizing them. I chimed in with market perspective and ideas about how various projects might add to the relevance of OpenJDK in new markets and for new uses. The Challenge has been a challenge to judge but in the end, we picked seven finalists to continue on to the Project phase, where they will implement their proposals in the open, with the community invited to watch and participate. On August 4th the Project phase will end and the final judging round commence. Shortly after that, Sun will announce the winners, and cut some checks to some very deserving developers.

Here then are the seven finalists. Good luck, and thank you for your energy and initiative!

Closures for Java Neal Gafter
Implement XRender pipeline for Java2D Clemens Eisserer
Provide date and time library from JSR-310 Stephen Colebourne, Michael Nascimento Santos
Portable GUI backends Roman Kennke, Mario Torre
Virtual Machine Interface Andrew John Hughes
Free Software synthesizer implemention for the OpenJDK project Karl Helgason
OpenJDK on Windows Ted Neward


(2008-03-19 13:03:34.0) Permalink

20080305 Wednesday March 05, 2008

Open Sourcing the Vast Wasteland

Remember when Sun said the company was open sourcing its Java implementations to take the Java platform into places it couldn't otherwise go? Places where open source and free software are a prerequisite for consideration?

How does a whole nation's digital TV infrastructure, serving nearly 100 million TVs grab you? And thats just the start! Java technology will be at the heart of Brazil's new digital TV standard. And it wouldn't have happened if Java was not Free software.

Countries in the developing world demand open source solutions to bring advanced technology within reach of their citizens, while maintaining control of their economic destiny. As Free software, Java is positioned to be a foundation for initiatives such as Brazil's SBTVD. Where will Java go next? Anywhere in the world!

 

(2008-03-05 16:56:11.0) Permalink Comments [1]

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