For 15 years, the Eclipse Foundation has provided our global community of developers and organizations with a mature, scalable and business-friendly platform and environment for open source software collaboration and innovation. We provide the governance, processes, and infrastructure that fuel the commercial success of our members. Learn more at http://eclipse.org
The document discusses the growing adoption of open source software. It outlines the four core freedoms that define open source and free software. It discusses perspectives from developers and organizations on why they contribute to open source. It notes that over 90% of companies rely on open source components and that open source is driving innovation. Foundations like Eclipse play an important role in supporting open source collaboration and governance.
Cloud native has emerged as an important strategy for IT modernization and business transformation initiatives. The enterprise marketplace has a strong desire to see Jakarta EE, the successor of Java EE, evolve to support containers, microservices, and multi-cloud portability. The objective of the 2019 Jakarta EE Developer Survey was to help Java ecosystem stakeholders better understand the requirements, priorities, and perceptions of enterprise developer communities.
Applied Domain-Driven Design Blueprints for Jakarta EEJakarta_EE
Domain-Driven Design (DDD) is an architectural approach that strongly focuses on materializing the business domain in enterprise software through disciplined object-oriented analysis. This session demonstrates first-hand how DDD can be elegantly implemented using Jakarta EE via an open source project named Cargo Tracker.
Cargo Tracker maps DDD concepts like entities, value objects, aggregates and repositories to Jakarta EE code examples in a realistic application. We will also see how DDD concepts like the bounded context are invaluable to designing pragmatic microservices.
Cloud Native Java Innovation at the Eclipse Foundation Thabang Mashologu
Hosted by the Eclipse Foundation, Jakarta EE is the home of open source, cloud native Java innovation. Working together, the world’s Java ecosystem leaders, including Fujitsu, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, Red Hat, SAP, and Tomitribe, are advancing Java EE and Jakarta EE to support moving mission-critical applications and workloads to the cloud. This presentation provides an overview of the various cloud native Java initiatives within the Eclipse community.
Building cloud native microservices with project HelidonDmitry Kornilov
Helidon is a set of Java libraries for building cloud-native microservices. It includes Helidon SE, which provides a lightweight microservices framework, and Helidon MP, which implements the MicroProfile specifications. The presentation covered what Helidon is, its open source nature, components of Helidon SE and MP, performance benchmarks, and roadmap plans including upcoming support for MicroProfile 3.0, Hibernate, HTTP/2 and more.
The document discusses the growing adoption of open source software. It outlines the four core freedoms that define open source and free software. It discusses perspectives from developers and organizations on why they contribute to open source. It notes that over 90% of companies rely on open source components and that open source is driving innovation. Foundations like Eclipse play an important role in supporting open source collaboration and governance.
Cloud native has emerged as an important strategy for IT modernization and business transformation initiatives. The enterprise marketplace has a strong desire to see Jakarta EE, the successor of Java EE, evolve to support containers, microservices, and multi-cloud portability. The objective of the 2019 Jakarta EE Developer Survey was to help Java ecosystem stakeholders better understand the requirements, priorities, and perceptions of enterprise developer communities.
Applied Domain-Driven Design Blueprints for Jakarta EEJakarta_EE
Domain-Driven Design (DDD) is an architectural approach that strongly focuses on materializing the business domain in enterprise software through disciplined object-oriented analysis. This session demonstrates first-hand how DDD can be elegantly implemented using Jakarta EE via an open source project named Cargo Tracker.
Cargo Tracker maps DDD concepts like entities, value objects, aggregates and repositories to Jakarta EE code examples in a realistic application. We will also see how DDD concepts like the bounded context are invaluable to designing pragmatic microservices.
Cloud Native Java Innovation at the Eclipse Foundation Thabang Mashologu
Hosted by the Eclipse Foundation, Jakarta EE is the home of open source, cloud native Java innovation. Working together, the world’s Java ecosystem leaders, including Fujitsu, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, Red Hat, SAP, and Tomitribe, are advancing Java EE and Jakarta EE to support moving mission-critical applications and workloads to the cloud. This presentation provides an overview of the various cloud native Java initiatives within the Eclipse community.
Building cloud native microservices with project HelidonDmitry Kornilov
Helidon is a set of Java libraries for building cloud-native microservices. It includes Helidon SE, which provides a lightweight microservices framework, and Helidon MP, which implements the MicroProfile specifications. The presentation covered what Helidon is, its open source nature, components of Helidon SE and MP, performance benchmarks, and roadmap plans including upcoming support for MicroProfile 3.0, Hibernate, HTTP/2 and more.
The document discusses open source projects and choosing the right governance option for sustainability. It notes that while open source licensing is important, provenance, open governance, vendor neutrality, and ecosystem are also important factors. The Eclipse Foundation is presented as an option that provides these through being a non-profit located in Europe with a global reach and many strategic members and projects. The presentation encourages projects to consider these additional factors when determining the best long-term governance structure.
"Open Source as a enabler for industry collaborations and innovation!" by Gaë...Mindtrek
Track | the Future of Open Source Business
Gaël Blondelle, Chief Membership Officer, Eclipse Foundation
Mindtrek Conference
15th of November 2022.
Tampere, Finland
www.mindtrek.org
My Open Source journey | Community Day, EclipseCon Europe 2019Jakarta_EE
The document discusses Ivar Grimstad's open source journey and involvement with Scala, snoopee.agilejava.eu, and mvc-spec.org. It encourages participation in open source and is made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0.
Eclipse Foundation Membership Prospectus (March 2019)Thabang Mashologu
The Eclipse Foundation provides a collaborative environment for open source software projects. It offers various membership levels that provide benefits like governance participation, marketing support, and event discounts. Membership levels include Strategic, Enterprise, Solutions, and Associate based on organization size and involvement. The Foundation manages projects, intellectual property, and infrastructure to support a global developer community.
The document discusses the progress of the Eclipse Software Defined Vehicle (SDV) Working Group in its first year. It summarizes the growth of the working group from 41 members to numerous projects focused on areas beyond just middleware like tooling, devops, applications, and standards. It outlines the working group's governance principles and highlights upcoming events like the 2023 SDV Hackathon to encourage further collaboration on building open source software for vehicles.
The Eclipse Foundation conducted a survey of 1,717 IoT developers in 2019. The survey found that two-thirds of respondents currently work on or will work on IoT projects in the next 18 months. AWS, Azure and GCP were the top IoT cloud platforms, while C, C++, Java, JavaScript and Python were the most used programming languages. MQTT was still the dominant communication protocol. The Eclipse IDE was also the leading development environment for building IoT applications.
The Eclipse Foundation conducted a survey of 1,717 IoT developers in 2019. The survey found that two-thirds of respondents currently work on or will work on IoT projects in the next 18 months. AWS, Azure and GCP were the leading IoT cloud platforms, while C, C++, Java, JavaScript and Python were the most commonly used programming languages. MQTT was still the dominant communication protocol. The Eclipse IDE was also the leading development environment for building IoT applications.
Cloud Native Java Community Day | EclipseCon Europe 2019Jakarta_EE
Cloud Native Java session, Community Day at EclipseCon Europe 2019.
Presented by Community Day Organizers: Heiko Rupp, Jan Westerkamp, Tanja Obradovic, Susan Iwai, Shabnam Mayel
Why robotics needs open source communitiesPhilippe Krief
This document discusses why robotics needs open source communities. It provides examples of how open source communities helped Bosch and MQTT gain visibility and recognition. Being an open source citizen means feeding, respecting, embracing, and engaging your community. Open source foundations like Eclipse can help by providing infrastructure, governance, and community development support. The Eclipse Foundation is launching an industrial robotics working group to further this area.
Eclipse MicroProfile: Accelerating Cloud-Native Application Development with ...Thabang Mashologu
An overview of the business value that the Eclipse MicroProfile project can bring to an organization that is faced with the challenges of evolving into a world where containers, microservices, cloud, open source, and enterprise Java intersect.
You may have heard of Hackathons, well Buildathons are similar but are focused on addressing and implementing real challenges. Here is a great way for your company to provide real support and Pro Bono help to a nonprofit in a one-day setting.
The document discusses innovation and how networks are becoming critical to the innovation process. It notes that innovation is now faster, more global, more open and complex. Companies with a connected innovation process experience faster conversion rates. Networks help connect a wide variety of innovation sources and the best ideas often come from groups rather than individuals.
Traditionally API has been the domain of developers, architects and IT folks.
The BIG shift we are seeing now, is that companies have open up APIs to the internet, internally, partners, clients, developers etc.,.
This shift is driven by mobile, Cloud, IoT etc.,
All these are changing the name of the game.
Organizations have opened up revenue streams, ways to make money, and that is the fundamental SHIFT we are looking at today in this session.
The document discusses how the definition of a healthy open source project has evolved over time at the Eclipse Foundation from 2001 to 2021. It began with ensuring software works properly but now includes priorities like security, sustainability, supply chain management, and building an inclusive community. The Eclipse Foundation has played a key role in these changes by focusing on adopters, contributors, social coding practices, and addressing modern issues like reproducible builds and carbon neutral development.
This document discusses and defines the concept of Enterprise 2.0. It provides overviews of 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0 technologies and how they relate to collaboration capabilities. It also examines drivers for adopting Enterprise 2.0 like globalization, innovation and knowledge sharing. Generational differences are discussed as both opportunities and challenges for implementation. Overall the document serves to frame and introduce the topic of Enterprise 2.0 for organizations.
Jakarta for dummEEs | JakartaOne LivestreamJakarta_EE
The document provides an overview of Jakarta EE, formerly known as Java EE. It begins with a brief history, noting how Eclipse MicroProfile was launched in 2016 in response to concerns about Java EE's relevance. In 2017, Oracle contributed Java EE assets to the Eclipse Foundation's new Jakarta EE project. The document then discusses Jakarta EE specifications, APIs, and TCKs that are being developed outside the JCP process. It lists the growing number of compatible implementations and notes that Jakarta EE 8 will be identical to Java EE 8. It concludes by outlining some of the next steps, including moving to the "jakarta" namespace and determining the content and timeline for future Jakarta EE
The document discusses open source projects and choosing the right governance option for sustainability. It notes that while open source licensing is important, provenance, open governance, vendor neutrality, and ecosystem are also important factors. The Eclipse Foundation is presented as an option that provides these through being a non-profit located in Europe with a global reach and many strategic members and projects. The presentation encourages projects to consider these additional factors when determining the best long-term governance structure.
"Open Source as a enabler for industry collaborations and innovation!" by Gaë...Mindtrek
Track | the Future of Open Source Business
Gaël Blondelle, Chief Membership Officer, Eclipse Foundation
Mindtrek Conference
15th of November 2022.
Tampere, Finland
www.mindtrek.org
My Open Source journey | Community Day, EclipseCon Europe 2019Jakarta_EE
The document discusses Ivar Grimstad's open source journey and involvement with Scala, snoopee.agilejava.eu, and mvc-spec.org. It encourages participation in open source and is made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0.
Eclipse Foundation Membership Prospectus (March 2019)Thabang Mashologu
The Eclipse Foundation provides a collaborative environment for open source software projects. It offers various membership levels that provide benefits like governance participation, marketing support, and event discounts. Membership levels include Strategic, Enterprise, Solutions, and Associate based on organization size and involvement. The Foundation manages projects, intellectual property, and infrastructure to support a global developer community.
The document discusses the progress of the Eclipse Software Defined Vehicle (SDV) Working Group in its first year. It summarizes the growth of the working group from 41 members to numerous projects focused on areas beyond just middleware like tooling, devops, applications, and standards. It outlines the working group's governance principles and highlights upcoming events like the 2023 SDV Hackathon to encourage further collaboration on building open source software for vehicles.
The Eclipse Foundation conducted a survey of 1,717 IoT developers in 2019. The survey found that two-thirds of respondents currently work on or will work on IoT projects in the next 18 months. AWS, Azure and GCP were the top IoT cloud platforms, while C, C++, Java, JavaScript and Python were the most used programming languages. MQTT was still the dominant communication protocol. The Eclipse IDE was also the leading development environment for building IoT applications.
The Eclipse Foundation conducted a survey of 1,717 IoT developers in 2019. The survey found that two-thirds of respondents currently work on or will work on IoT projects in the next 18 months. AWS, Azure and GCP were the leading IoT cloud platforms, while C, C++, Java, JavaScript and Python were the most commonly used programming languages. MQTT was still the dominant communication protocol. The Eclipse IDE was also the leading development environment for building IoT applications.
Cloud Native Java Community Day | EclipseCon Europe 2019Jakarta_EE
Cloud Native Java session, Community Day at EclipseCon Europe 2019.
Presented by Community Day Organizers: Heiko Rupp, Jan Westerkamp, Tanja Obradovic, Susan Iwai, Shabnam Mayel
Why robotics needs open source communitiesPhilippe Krief
This document discusses why robotics needs open source communities. It provides examples of how open source communities helped Bosch and MQTT gain visibility and recognition. Being an open source citizen means feeding, respecting, embracing, and engaging your community. Open source foundations like Eclipse can help by providing infrastructure, governance, and community development support. The Eclipse Foundation is launching an industrial robotics working group to further this area.
Eclipse MicroProfile: Accelerating Cloud-Native Application Development with ...Thabang Mashologu
An overview of the business value that the Eclipse MicroProfile project can bring to an organization that is faced with the challenges of evolving into a world where containers, microservices, cloud, open source, and enterprise Java intersect.
You may have heard of Hackathons, well Buildathons are similar but are focused on addressing and implementing real challenges. Here is a great way for your company to provide real support and Pro Bono help to a nonprofit in a one-day setting.
The document discusses innovation and how networks are becoming critical to the innovation process. It notes that innovation is now faster, more global, more open and complex. Companies with a connected innovation process experience faster conversion rates. Networks help connect a wide variety of innovation sources and the best ideas often come from groups rather than individuals.
Traditionally API has been the domain of developers, architects and IT folks.
The BIG shift we are seeing now, is that companies have open up APIs to the internet, internally, partners, clients, developers etc.,.
This shift is driven by mobile, Cloud, IoT etc.,
All these are changing the name of the game.
Organizations have opened up revenue streams, ways to make money, and that is the fundamental SHIFT we are looking at today in this session.
The document discusses how the definition of a healthy open source project has evolved over time at the Eclipse Foundation from 2001 to 2021. It began with ensuring software works properly but now includes priorities like security, sustainability, supply chain management, and building an inclusive community. The Eclipse Foundation has played a key role in these changes by focusing on adopters, contributors, social coding practices, and addressing modern issues like reproducible builds and carbon neutral development.
This document discusses and defines the concept of Enterprise 2.0. It provides overviews of 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0 technologies and how they relate to collaboration capabilities. It also examines drivers for adopting Enterprise 2.0 like globalization, innovation and knowledge sharing. Generational differences are discussed as both opportunities and challenges for implementation. Overall the document serves to frame and introduce the topic of Enterprise 2.0 for organizations.
Jakarta for dummEEs | JakartaOne LivestreamJakarta_EE
The document provides an overview of Jakarta EE, formerly known as Java EE. It begins with a brief history, noting how Eclipse MicroProfile was launched in 2016 in response to concerns about Java EE's relevance. In 2017, Oracle contributed Java EE assets to the Eclipse Foundation's new Jakarta EE project. The document then discusses Jakarta EE specifications, APIs, and TCKs that are being developed outside the JCP process. It lists the growing number of compatible implementations and notes that Jakarta EE 8 will be identical to Java EE 8. It concludes by outlining some of the next steps, including moving to the "jakarta" namespace and determining the content and timeline for future Jakarta EE
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- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
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Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
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Eclipse Foundation Overview (April 2019)
1. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
The Eclipse Foundation
Enabling Industry Collaboration and Open Innovation
COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
eclipse.org
April 2019
2. 2COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Agenda
> Why Open Source?
> Why Participate?
> About the Eclipse Foundation
> Our Services
> Working Groups
> Research Programs
> The Opportunity
3. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Open source
participation is surging
4. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
31M
GitHub users
100M80-90%
Open source makes up
80-90% of applications
GitHub hosts
100M repositories
Sources: Forrester, GitHub
5. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
100%
% productivity improvement seen
by firms contributing to open
source
65%55%
% companies leverage open
source in production
% firms contributing to open
source projects
Sources: Black Duck, Harvard Business School
6. 6COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Agenda
> Why Open Source?
> Why Participate?
> About the Eclipse Foundation
> Our Services
> Working Groups
> Research Programs
> The Opportunity
7. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Demonstrate good
corporate citizenship
8. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Accelerate
innovation
9. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Participate in
open collaboration
10. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Safeguard investments
11. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Mitigate
business risk
12. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Retain and recruit
top talent
13. 13COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Agenda
> Why Open Source?
> Why Participate?
> About the Eclipse Foundation
> Our Services
> Working Groups
> Research Programs
> The Opportunity
14. 14COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0) 14
Community driven.
Code first.
Commercial grade.
The Platform for Open Innovation and Collaboration
15. 15COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Our Unique Approach
GitHub Single-Vendor
Open Source
Eclipse
Foundation
Thriving developer community ✔ ✔ ✔
High quality code that solves complex problems ✔ ? ✔
Ecosystem development and marketing services
to drive adoption and monetization ✔ ✔
Predictable processes and guidance to deliver
large-scale innovation on a regular cadence ✔
Vendor-neutral governance model to support
industry-wide collaboration ✔
Business-friendly IP and licensing services to
enable commercialization ✔
16. 16COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
We provide a collaborative
environment for the world’s
leading Java ecosystem
players to advance open
source enterprise Java
technologies for the cloud.
We enable industry
leaders to collaborate on
an end-to-end IoT
architecture that is
secure, flexible, and fully
based on open source
and open standards.
We provide leading
automotive OEMs, their
suppliers, and partners with
a sustainable, transparent,
and vendor-neutral platform
to collaborate on open
technologies and
standards.
The Eclipse IDE is the
critical development
environment for more than
4 million active users. Our
community is innovating on
the next generation of cloud
native developer tools.
Cloud Native Java IoT & Edge Automotive Tools
Strategic Focus Areas
17. 17COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
275+
Members
360+
Projects
1550+
Committers
30
Staff Members
10+
Working Groups
195M+
Lines of Code
The Eclipse Foundation - By the Numbers
18. 18COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
The Growing Eclipse Foundation Member Community
19. 19COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Home to the Eclipse IDE
Improved performance
Language Server support
Polyglot language support
Latest Java™ versions
Proven extensibility
Quarterly releases
The Leading Open Platform for Professional Developers
20. 20COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Agenda
> Why Open Source?
> Why Participate?
> About the Eclipse Foundation
> Our Services
> Working Groups
> Research Programs
> The Opportunity
21. 21COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Delivering Proven Business Value
Infrastructure
Ecosystem Development & Marketing
IP Management & Licensing
Governance & Processes
22. 22COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Governance & Processes
> Community of Practices: Eclipse Development Process
> Vendor-neutral governance structure
• Legal entity, bylaws, member agreement, anti-trust policies
> Well defined project lifecycle
> Technical decisions made by project leadership
23. 23COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Infrastructure
> Professionally managed open source forge
• Git, Gerrit, Jenkins, download servers, website hosting
• Scalable and repeatable build service
• SLA for 99.98% uptime
> Flexibility to use Github
24. 24COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
IP Management & Licensing
> Management of Committer Agreement and CLA
• Provenance and License Compatibility (no GPL or AGPL)
> Trademark stewardship for projects, working groups, and industry initiatives
25. 25COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Ecosystem Development & Marketing
> Business development staff to assist with recruitment
> Professional marketing staff
> Event planners
26. 26COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Our Impact: Open Innovation at Industrial Scale
Value Line
Governance Layer
The Eclipse Foundation provides an open,
vendor-neutral development platform to enable
collaboration
Product-Ready
Technologies
Requirements
& Use Cases
Collaboration Layer
Technology Producers jointly define roadmap and
build core capabilities
Competition Layer
Commercial Adopters focus resources on rapidly
building differentiating features
$10
billion
of shared
investment
to date
27. 27COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Agenda
> Why Open Source?
> Why Participate?
> About the Eclipse Foundation
> Our Services
> Working Groups
> Research Programs
> The Opportunity
28. 28COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
A Sustainable, Business-Friendly Ecosystem
Projects &
Working
Groups
Business
Models
Value Creation
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Eclipse Foundation Working Groups
> Provide an open and vendor-neutral governance framework for collaborative
development
> Enable industry collaboration and coordination across many open source
projects
> Extend the best practices of the Eclipse Development Process
> Support the shared development of requirements, specifications, marketing
strategy, test environments, security policies, etc.
30. 30COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Key Functions of Working Groups
> Requirements gathering across open source
projects and organizations
> Creating and committing to long term multi-project
roadmaps
> Architectural discussions and collaboration across
open source projects
> Testing and certification of industry platforms
> Funding of joint development
> Ecosystem and community development
31. 31COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Working Groups at a Glance
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Eclipse IoT Working Group
The Eclipse IoT Working Group provides the open technology needed to build IoT
Devices, Edge Gateways and Cloud Platforms.
33. 33COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Jakarta EE Working Group
Establishes
the technical
roadmap
Ensures
compatibility
Drives the
Jakarta EE
brand
Approves
Specifications
Builds the
community
Powered by participation, Jakarta EE is focused on enabling community-driven
collaboration and open innovation for the cloud.
34. 34COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
LocationTech Working Group
The LocationTech Working Group develops advanced location aware technologies.
35. 35COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Science Working Group
The Eclipse Science Working Group works to solve the problems of making science
software inter-operable and interchangeable.
Eclipse
ChemClipse
Eclipse
XACC
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openPASS Working Group
The Eclipse openPASS Working Group specifies and builds core frameworks and
modules for the prospective evaluation of advanced driver assistance systems and
partially automated driving functions with respect to traffic safety.
sim@
openPASS
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openMDM Working Group
The openMDM® Working Group fosters and supports an open ecosystem providing
tools and systems, qualification kits and adapters for standardized and
vendor-neutral management of measurement data.
MDM|BL
38. 38COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Capella Industry Consortium
The Capella Industry Consortium is dedicated to developing the ecosystem around
the Capella project with vendor-neutral and open governance.
39. 39COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
OS.bea
The OS.bea Working Group fosters and supports an open and innovative
eco-system providing tools, systems, and adapters for the standardized,
openly-available, and vendor-neutral Open Standard Business Platform.
40. 40COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0) 40
Structure of Eclipse Working Groups
> Eclipse Foundation Members can join an Eclipse
Working Group
> Eclipse Working Groups have at least two tiers of
members:
• Steering Committee members
• Participant Members
> Eclipse Working Group Steering Committee:
• Approve Working Group Charter
• Set Working Group Budget and Fees
• Establish Working Group Committees: Requirements,
Architecture, etc.
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Starting an Eclipse Working Group
> Define vision and scope
> Create a Working Group Charter
> Secure initial list of participants
> Establish initial budget and fees
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Resources Required to Get Started
> Management and leadership
> IT Services to create and maintain website
> Community management services to assist with
outreach and events
> Project management to assist with work group
meetings, onboard new members, facilitate
collaboration
> Ecosystem development to recruit new members
> Typical cost $200K-$300K/year but will grow
depending on services required
> Funding driven by working group membership fees
43. 43COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Agenda
> Why Open Source?
> Why Participate?
> About the Eclipse Foundation
> Our Services
> Working Groups
> Research Programs
> The Opportunity
44. 44COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
The Eclipse Foundation as a Research Catalyst
Large
Organization
SME
Researchers
Open Source
Products & Expertise
Technology Transfer
Innovation
Inject
Requirements
Industrialization
Prototypes
45. 45COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Research Projects: Funding Organizations
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Research Projects
47. 47COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Agenda
> Why Open Source?
> Why Participate?
> About the Eclipse Foundation
> Our Services
> Working Groups
> Research Programs
> The Opportunity
48. COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Join Us!
Become an
Eclipse
Foundation
Member
Join an Eclipse
Foundation
Working Group
Participate
in open
collaboration and
innovation
49. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
To learn more, or to participate visit:
eclipse.org
or connect with us at:
membership@eclipse.org
49
50. 50COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0)COPYRIGHT (C) 2019, ECLIPSE FOUNDATION, INC. | MADE AVAILABLE UNDER THE ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE 2.0 (EPL-2.0) 50
Thank you!