際際滷shows by User: stephenrwalli / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: stephenrwalli / Thu, 20 Oct 2022 03:31:49 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: stephenrwalli Avoiding Maslows Hammer: Or the Problem of the Birmingham Screwdriver in Open Source Non-profits /slideshow/avoiding-maslows-hammer-or-the-problem-of-the-birmingham-screwdriver-in-open-source-nonprofits/253722853 maslow-fin-221020033149-6924c17b
Linux Foundation Summit, Dublin, 2022 Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y1O7NPiGM4 Maslows Hammer refers to the adage that if all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Non-profits serve open source project communities in very particular ways. Creating non-profits to support the communitys work takes skill and thoughtfulness, often as much as the work building the community itself around the project. The successful creation of the non-profit structure can lead to the next wave of growth for the community. An unhealthy non-profit is a drain on everyones energy. This talk provides a framework for understanding how a non-profit solves certain inescapable problems that successful open source project communities encounter in their growth. It provides practices and processes and tools to engage partners in creating successful non-profits. It looks at a number of real world examples. Anti-patterns are presented along the way. ]]>

Linux Foundation Summit, Dublin, 2022 Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y1O7NPiGM4 Maslows Hammer refers to the adage that if all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Non-profits serve open source project communities in very particular ways. Creating non-profits to support the communitys work takes skill and thoughtfulness, often as much as the work building the community itself around the project. The successful creation of the non-profit structure can lead to the next wave of growth for the community. An unhealthy non-profit is a drain on everyones energy. This talk provides a framework for understanding how a non-profit solves certain inescapable problems that successful open source project communities encounter in their growth. It provides practices and processes and tools to engage partners in creating successful non-profits. It looks at a number of real world examples. Anti-patterns are presented along the way. ]]>
Thu, 20 Oct 2022 03:31:49 GMT /slideshow/avoiding-maslows-hammer-or-the-problem-of-the-birmingham-screwdriver-in-open-source-nonprofits/253722853 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Avoiding Maslows Hammer: Or the Problem of the Birmingham Screwdriver in Open Source Non-profits stephenrwalli Linux Foundation Summit, Dublin, 2022 Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y1O7NPiGM4 Maslows Hammer refers to the adage that if all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Non-profits serve open source project communities in very particular ways. Creating non-profits to support the communitys work takes skill and thoughtfulness, often as much as the work building the community itself around the project. The successful creation of the non-profit structure can lead to the next wave of growth for the community. An unhealthy non-profit is a drain on everyones energy. This talk provides a framework for understanding how a non-profit solves certain inescapable problems that successful open source project communities encounter in their growth. It provides practices and processes and tools to engage partners in creating successful non-profits. It looks at a number of real world examples. Anti-patterns are presented along the way. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/maslow-fin-221020033149-6924c17b-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Linux Foundation Summit, Dublin, 2022 Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y1O7NPiGM4 Maslows Hammer refers to the adage that if all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Non-profits serve open source project communities in very particular ways. Creating non-profits to support the communitys work takes skill and thoughtfulness, often as much as the work building the community itself around the project. The successful creation of the non-profit structure can lead to the next wave of growth for the community. An unhealthy non-profit is a drain on everyones energy. This talk provides a framework for understanding how a non-profit solves certain inescapable problems that successful open source project communities encounter in their growth. It provides practices and processes and tools to engage partners in creating successful non-profits. It looks at a number of real world examples. Anti-patterns are presented along the way.
Avoiding Maslows Hammer: Or the Problem of the Birmingham Screwdriver in Open Source Non-profits from Stephen Walli
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Minimum Viable Governance /slideshow/minimum-viable-governance/238979482 mvg-sarah-stephe-201026182745
There is a proliferation of open source related non-profits, each working to drive attention to a set of projects or technology spaces, each demanding attention or membership dollars for growth. One of the first discussions such non-profits encounter is the governance discussion. Then come the projects for the non-profit to support, and each of them too wants to have a discussion about governance. We will look at the history of open source non-profits, and their governance structures, and how it met their goals (and the goals of their projects). Then we will look at whats changed and work to evolve the model that people can use to judge for themselves whether a non-profit solves for the problems that need to be solved. Understanding the underlying governance models and structures in a non-profit will allow project owners and non-profit members to better judge what is needed for growth, what growth might look like, and what it will cost in effort and money. Sarah and Stephen have worked in a number of different open source project and non-profit settings and can speak to the models, mistakes, and learnings. From the Open Source Summit Europe 2020, delivered 26 Oct 2020. https://osseu2020.sched.com/event/eCGH/mvg-minimum-viable-governance-stephen-walli-sarah-novotny-microsoft ]]>

There is a proliferation of open source related non-profits, each working to drive attention to a set of projects or technology spaces, each demanding attention or membership dollars for growth. One of the first discussions such non-profits encounter is the governance discussion. Then come the projects for the non-profit to support, and each of them too wants to have a discussion about governance. We will look at the history of open source non-profits, and their governance structures, and how it met their goals (and the goals of their projects). Then we will look at whats changed and work to evolve the model that people can use to judge for themselves whether a non-profit solves for the problems that need to be solved. Understanding the underlying governance models and structures in a non-profit will allow project owners and non-profit members to better judge what is needed for growth, what growth might look like, and what it will cost in effort and money. Sarah and Stephen have worked in a number of different open source project and non-profit settings and can speak to the models, mistakes, and learnings. From the Open Source Summit Europe 2020, delivered 26 Oct 2020. https://osseu2020.sched.com/event/eCGH/mvg-minimum-viable-governance-stephen-walli-sarah-novotny-microsoft ]]>
Mon, 26 Oct 2020 18:27:45 GMT /slideshow/minimum-viable-governance/238979482 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Minimum Viable Governance stephenrwalli There is a proliferation of open source related non-profits, each working to drive attention to a set of projects or technology spaces, each demanding attention or membership dollars for growth. One of the first discussions such non-profits encounter is the governance discussion. Then come the projects for the non-profit to support, and each of them too wants to have a discussion about governance. We will look at the history of open source non-profits, and their governance structures, and how it met their goals (and the goals of their projects). Then we will look at whats changed and work to evolve the model that people can use to judge for themselves whether a non-profit solves for the problems that need to be solved. Understanding the underlying governance models and structures in a non-profit will allow project owners and non-profit members to better judge what is needed for growth, what growth might look like, and what it will cost in effort and money. Sarah and Stephen have worked in a number of different open source project and non-profit settings and can speak to the models, mistakes, and learnings. From the Open Source Summit Europe 2020, delivered 26 Oct 2020. https://osseu2020.sched.com/event/eCGH/mvg-minimum-viable-governance-stephen-walli-sarah-novotny-microsoft <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/mvg-sarah-stephe-201026182745-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> There is a proliferation of open source related non-profits, each working to drive attention to a set of projects or technology spaces, each demanding attention or membership dollars for growth. One of the first discussions such non-profits encounter is the governance discussion. Then come the projects for the non-profit to support, and each of them too wants to have a discussion about governance. We will look at the history of open source non-profits, and their governance structures, and how it met their goals (and the goals of their projects). Then we will look at whats changed and work to evolve the model that people can use to judge for themselves whether a non-profit solves for the problems that need to be solved. Understanding the underlying governance models and structures in a non-profit will allow project owners and non-profit members to better judge what is needed for growth, what growth might look like, and what it will cost in effort and money. Sarah and Stephen have worked in a number of different open source project and non-profit settings and can speak to the models, mistakes, and learnings. From the Open Source Summit Europe 2020, delivered 26 Oct 2020. https://osseu2020.sched.com/event/eCGH/mvg-minimum-viable-governance-stephen-walli-sarah-novotny-microsoft
Minimum Viable Governance from Stephen Walli
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Software Freedom in a Post Open Source World /slideshow/software-freedom-in-a-post-open-source-world/232873563 softwarefreedominapostossworld-200430003332
Engineers have collaborated on software since they've written software all the way back through the 1950s. In the past few years we have begun to see people argue for a different definition of open source software and raise concerns for the sustainability of the ecosystem. This talk looks at the underpinnings of those concerns, and how the future of free software is an anchor going forward. https://2020.copyleftconf.org/schedule/presentation/8/ ]]>

Engineers have collaborated on software since they've written software all the way back through the 1950s. In the past few years we have begun to see people argue for a different definition of open source software and raise concerns for the sustainability of the ecosystem. This talk looks at the underpinnings of those concerns, and how the future of free software is an anchor going forward. https://2020.copyleftconf.org/schedule/presentation/8/ ]]>
Thu, 30 Apr 2020 00:33:32 GMT /slideshow/software-freedom-in-a-post-open-source-world/232873563 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Software Freedom in a Post Open Source World stephenrwalli Engineers have collaborated on software since they've written software all the way back through the 1950s. In the past few years we have begun to see people argue for a different definition of open source software and raise concerns for the sustainability of the ecosystem. This talk looks at the underpinnings of those concerns, and how the future of free software is an anchor going forward. https://2020.copyleftconf.org/schedule/presentation/8/ <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/softwarefreedominapostossworld-200430003332-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Engineers have collaborated on software since they&#39;ve written software all the way back through the 1950s. In the past few years we have begun to see people argue for a different definition of open source software and raise concerns for the sustainability of the ecosystem. This talk looks at the underpinnings of those concerns, and how the future of free software is an anchor going forward. https://2020.copyleftconf.org/schedule/presentation/8/
Software Freedom in a Post Open Source World from Stephen Walli
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Sustaining Open Source Software /slideshow/sustaining-open-source-software/191450988 sustainingoss-191107212121
際際滷s from my latest talk at the Linux Foundation Open Source Summit in Lyon (October 2019). https://osseu19.sched.com/event/TLLb/sustaining-open-source-software-stephen-walli-microsoft ]]>

際際滷s from my latest talk at the Linux Foundation Open Source Summit in Lyon (October 2019). https://osseu19.sched.com/event/TLLb/sustaining-open-source-software-stephen-walli-microsoft ]]>
Thu, 07 Nov 2019 21:21:21 GMT /slideshow/sustaining-open-source-software/191450988 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Sustaining Open Source Software stephenrwalli 際際滷s from my latest talk at the Linux Foundation Open Source Summit in Lyon (October 2019). https://osseu19.sched.com/event/TLLb/sustaining-open-source-software-stephen-walli-microsoft <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/sustainingoss-191107212121-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 際際滷s from my latest talk at the Linux Foundation Open Source Summit in Lyon (October 2019). https://osseu19.sched.com/event/TLLb/sustaining-open-source-software-stephen-walli-microsoft
Sustaining Open Source Software from Stephen Walli
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SCaLE 17x There is [Still] NO Open Source Business Model /slideshow/scale-17x-there-is-still-no-open-source-business-model/138596892 noopensourcebusmodels-scale17x-190329041107
Building a business is hard work, but it is even harder when the business starts with a faulty premise. This presentation will walk the audience through models for thinking about open source software economics, and business modelling to help understand what business ideas will likely work in a world enabled by open source software. The talk looks at: - The underlying economics of open source software development from both the production and consumption perspectives. - The basics of business modelling that will help folks understand the risks and strengths of open source licensed software. - The pitfalls and dangers of getting the model wrong. - Several case studies in successes and failures in the space. - A way to think about the use and abuse of open source software foundations. SCaLE Desc: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/17x/presentations/there-no-open-source-software-business-model Further Reading: They're backed up with the following writing: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 https://medium.com/open-source-communities/ask-not-what-your-community-can-do-for-you-b26546197a35 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-still-no-open-source-business-model-8748738faa43 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/sustaining-open-source-software-4a62a4b6d0f3 ]]>

Building a business is hard work, but it is even harder when the business starts with a faulty premise. This presentation will walk the audience through models for thinking about open source software economics, and business modelling to help understand what business ideas will likely work in a world enabled by open source software. The talk looks at: - The underlying economics of open source software development from both the production and consumption perspectives. - The basics of business modelling that will help folks understand the risks and strengths of open source licensed software. - The pitfalls and dangers of getting the model wrong. - Several case studies in successes and failures in the space. - A way to think about the use and abuse of open source software foundations. SCaLE Desc: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/17x/presentations/there-no-open-source-software-business-model Further Reading: They're backed up with the following writing: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 https://medium.com/open-source-communities/ask-not-what-your-community-can-do-for-you-b26546197a35 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-still-no-open-source-business-model-8748738faa43 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/sustaining-open-source-software-4a62a4b6d0f3 ]]>
Fri, 29 Mar 2019 04:11:07 GMT /slideshow/scale-17x-there-is-still-no-open-source-business-model/138596892 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) SCaLE 17x There is [Still] NO Open Source Business Model stephenrwalli Building a business is hard work, but it is even harder when the business starts with a faulty premise. This presentation will walk the audience through models for thinking about open source software economics, and business modelling to help understand what business ideas will likely work in a world enabled by open source software. The talk looks at: - The underlying economics of open source software development from both the production and consumption perspectives. - The basics of business modelling that will help folks understand the risks and strengths of open source licensed software. - The pitfalls and dangers of getting the model wrong. - Several case studies in successes and failures in the space. - A way to think about the use and abuse of open source software foundations. SCaLE Desc: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/17x/presentations/there-no-open-source-software-business-model Further Reading: They're backed up with the following writing: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 https://medium.com/open-source-communities/ask-not-what-your-community-can-do-for-you-b26546197a35 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-still-no-open-source-business-model-8748738faa43 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/sustaining-open-source-software-4a62a4b6d0f3 <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/noopensourcebusmodels-scale17x-190329041107-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Building a business is hard work, but it is even harder when the business starts with a faulty premise. This presentation will walk the audience through models for thinking about open source software economics, and business modelling to help understand what business ideas will likely work in a world enabled by open source software. The talk looks at: - The underlying economics of open source software development from both the production and consumption perspectives. - The basics of business modelling that will help folks understand the risks and strengths of open source licensed software. - The pitfalls and dangers of getting the model wrong. - Several case studies in successes and failures in the space. - A way to think about the use and abuse of open source software foundations. SCaLE Desc: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/17x/presentations/there-no-open-source-software-business-model Further Reading: They&#39;re backed up with the following writing: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 https://medium.com/open-source-communities/ask-not-what-your-community-can-do-for-you-b26546197a35 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-still-no-open-source-business-model-8748738faa43 https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/sustaining-open-source-software-4a62a4b6d0f3
SCaLE 17x There is [Still] NO Open Source Business Model from Stephen Walli
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The Democratization of Software (SeaGL 2018) /slideshow/the-democratization-of-software-seagl-2018/122703264 seagl2018-democratization-181111045352
In 1995 everything changed with the creation of the World Wide Web. Anything that could be digitized was digitized and entire industries changed. And with the digitization came tools to help everyone become a producer of digital content. From music to video, books to journalism, we pulled all the friction out of the content pipeline and democratized entire industries. But the industry we never talk about is the one that was already digital software. Software was democratized as well. Weve shared software for as long as weve written software. By pulling the friction out of the pipeline around software and sharing it liberally through open source licensing, weve ended up in a completely new software industry over the past 20 years. This talk presents the trends that got the industry to where it is, as well as ideas for the coming challenges for the next twenty years of open source software. It might be a cautionary tale.]]>

In 1995 everything changed with the creation of the World Wide Web. Anything that could be digitized was digitized and entire industries changed. And with the digitization came tools to help everyone become a producer of digital content. From music to video, books to journalism, we pulled all the friction out of the content pipeline and democratized entire industries. But the industry we never talk about is the one that was already digital software. Software was democratized as well. Weve shared software for as long as weve written software. By pulling the friction out of the pipeline around software and sharing it liberally through open source licensing, weve ended up in a completely new software industry over the past 20 years. This talk presents the trends that got the industry to where it is, as well as ideas for the coming challenges for the next twenty years of open source software. It might be a cautionary tale.]]>
Sun, 11 Nov 2018 04:53:52 GMT /slideshow/the-democratization-of-software-seagl-2018/122703264 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) The Democratization of Software (SeaGL 2018) stephenrwalli In 1995 everything changed with the creation of the World Wide Web. Anything that could be digitized was digitized and entire industries changed. And with the digitization came tools to help everyone become a producer of digital content. From music to video, books to journalism, we pulled all the friction out of the content pipeline and democratized entire industries. But the industry we never talk about is the one that was already digital software. Software was democratized as well. Weve shared software for as long as weve written software. By pulling the friction out of the pipeline around software and sharing it liberally through open source licensing, weve ended up in a completely new software industry over the past 20 years. This talk presents the trends that got the industry to where it is, as well as ideas for the coming challenges for the next twenty years of open source software. It might be a cautionary tale. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/seagl2018-democratization-181111045352-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In 1995 everything changed with the creation of the World Wide Web. Anything that could be digitized was digitized and entire industries changed. And with the digitization came tools to help everyone become a producer of digital content. From music to video, books to journalism, we pulled all the friction out of the content pipeline and democratized entire industries. But the industry we never talk about is the one that was already digital software. Software was democratized as well. Weve shared software for as long as weve written software. By pulling the friction out of the pipeline around software and sharing it liberally through open source licensing, weve ended up in a completely new software industry over the past 20 years. This talk presents the trends that got the industry to where it is, as well as ideas for the coming challenges for the next twenty years of open source software. It might be a cautionary tale.
The Democratization of Software (SeaGL 2018) from Stephen Walli
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There is NO Open Source Business Model /slideshow/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-78575010/78575010 osen-2017-final-d-170804173714
The public presentation that matches the following blog posts: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 and https://opensource.com/business/15/8/open-source-products-four-rules ]]>

The public presentation that matches the following blog posts: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 and https://opensource.com/business/15/8/open-source-products-four-rules ]]>
Fri, 04 Aug 2017 17:37:14 GMT /slideshow/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-78575010/78575010 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) There is NO Open Source Business Model stephenrwalli The public presentation that matches the following blog posts: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 and https://opensource.com/business/15/8/open-source-products-four-rules <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/osen-2017-final-d-170804173714-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The public presentation that matches the following blog posts: https://medium.com/@stephenrwalli/there-is-no-open-source-business-model-cdc4cc20238 and https://opensource.com/business/15/8/open-source-products-four-rules
There is NO Open Source Business Model from Stephen Walli
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Docker Seattle Meetup, May 2017 /slideshow/docker-seattle-meetup-may-2017/76231232 docker-seattle-2017-meetup-170522213222
An introduction to the Moby Project and LinuxKit. The demo essentially walked through the LinuxKit examples available on Github at https://github.com/linuxkit/linuxkit paying specific attention to the linuxkit.yml nginx example in the home directory, and the redis-os example in the examples directory. ]]>

An introduction to the Moby Project and LinuxKit. The demo essentially walked through the LinuxKit examples available on Github at https://github.com/linuxkit/linuxkit paying specific attention to the linuxkit.yml nginx example in the home directory, and the redis-os example in the examples directory. ]]>
Mon, 22 May 2017 21:32:22 GMT /slideshow/docker-seattle-meetup-may-2017/76231232 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Docker Seattle Meetup, May 2017 stephenrwalli An introduction to the Moby Project and LinuxKit. The demo essentially walked through the LinuxKit examples available on Github at https://github.com/linuxkit/linuxkit paying specific attention to the linuxkit.yml nginx example in the home directory, and the redis-os example in the examples directory. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/docker-seattle-2017-meetup-170522213222-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> An introduction to the Moby Project and LinuxKit. The demo essentially walked through the LinuxKit examples available on Github at https://github.com/linuxkit/linuxkit paying specific attention to the linuxkit.yml nginx example in the home directory, and the redis-os example in the examples directory.
Docker Seattle Meetup, May 2017 from Stephen Walli
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Ask Not What Your Community Can Do For You /slideshow/ask-not-what-your-community-can-do-for-you/75790533 asknot-170508193607
Publishing software with an open source license is the definitive step, but it doesnt create a community. Growing and scaling a successful open source software project requires building three on ramps for users, developers, and ultimately contributors. This short talk outlines the practices and patterns for these on ramps, demonstrating how they relate to one another. More importantly the talk sets the mind set to bring to the discussion. Delivered at the Community Leadership Summit 2017 http://bit.ly/2qiP3z0 ]]>

Publishing software with an open source license is the definitive step, but it doesnt create a community. Growing and scaling a successful open source software project requires building three on ramps for users, developers, and ultimately contributors. This short talk outlines the practices and patterns for these on ramps, demonstrating how they relate to one another. More importantly the talk sets the mind set to bring to the discussion. Delivered at the Community Leadership Summit 2017 http://bit.ly/2qiP3z0 ]]>
Mon, 08 May 2017 19:36:06 GMT /slideshow/ask-not-what-your-community-can-do-for-you/75790533 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Ask Not What Your Community Can Do For You stephenrwalli Publishing software with an open source license is the definitive step, but it doesnt create a community. Growing and scaling a successful open source software project requires building three on ramps for users, developers, and ultimately contributors. This short talk outlines the practices and patterns for these on ramps, demonstrating how they relate to one another. More importantly the talk sets the mind set to bring to the discussion. Delivered at the Community Leadership Summit 2017 http://bit.ly/2qiP3z0 <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/asknot-170508193607-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Publishing software with an open source license is the definitive step, but it doesnt create a community. Growing and scaling a successful open source software project requires building three on ramps for users, developers, and ultimately contributors. This short talk outlines the practices and patterns for these on ramps, demonstrating how they relate to one another. More importantly the talk sets the mind set to bring to the discussion. Delivered at the Community Leadership Summit 2017 http://bit.ly/2qiP3z0
Ask Not What Your Community Can Do For You from Stephen Walli
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The Trouble with Open Source Software /slideshow/the-trouble-with-open-source-software/72868586 trouble-170306174655
I think 2016 was the year of open source angst. We're caught between discussions about open source sustainability and accelerating corporate open source projects. I tackle the two open source vectors most people discuss: community and corporate engagement. The real problem, however, is the democratization of software and the growing skills gap as the demand for software goes up. This talk was given at SCaLE 15X (http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/15x/presentations/trouble-open-source-software). ]]>

I think 2016 was the year of open source angst. We're caught between discussions about open source sustainability and accelerating corporate open source projects. I tackle the two open source vectors most people discuss: community and corporate engagement. The real problem, however, is the democratization of software and the growing skills gap as the demand for software goes up. This talk was given at SCaLE 15X (http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/15x/presentations/trouble-open-source-software). ]]>
Mon, 06 Mar 2017 17:46:55 GMT /slideshow/the-trouble-with-open-source-software/72868586 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) The Trouble with Open Source Software stephenrwalli I think 2016 was the year of open source angst. We're caught between discussions about open source sustainability and accelerating corporate open source projects. I tackle the two open source vectors most people discuss: community and corporate engagement. The real problem, however, is the democratization of software and the growing skills gap as the demand for software goes up. This talk was given at SCaLE 15X (http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/15x/presentations/trouble-open-source-software). <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/trouble-170306174655-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> I think 2016 was the year of open source angst. We&#39;re caught between discussions about open source sustainability and accelerating corporate open source projects. I tackle the two open source vectors most people discuss: community and corporate engagement. The real problem, however, is the democratization of software and the growing skills gap as the demand for software goes up. This talk was given at SCaLE 15X (http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/15x/presentations/trouble-open-source-software).
The Trouble with Open Source Software from Stephen Walli
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Freeloaders are Essential and Other Open Source Product Truths /slideshow/freeloaders-are-essential-and-other-open-source-product-truths/67745157 ato-2016-161027190204
際際滷s from talk at All Things Open, 2016, 27 October, 2016 https://allthingsopen.org/talk/freeloaders-are-essential-and-other-open-source-product-truths/ ]]>

際際滷s from talk at All Things Open, 2016, 27 October, 2016 https://allthingsopen.org/talk/freeloaders-are-essential-and-other-open-source-product-truths/ ]]>
Thu, 27 Oct 2016 19:02:04 GMT /slideshow/freeloaders-are-essential-and-other-open-source-product-truths/67745157 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Freeloaders are Essential and Other Open Source Product Truths stephenrwalli 際際滷s from talk at All Things Open, 2016, 27 October, 2016 https://allthingsopen.org/talk/freeloaders-are-essential-and-other-open-source-product-truths/ <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ato-2016-161027190204-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 際際滷s from talk at All Things Open, 2016, 27 October, 2016 https://allthingsopen.org/talk/freeloaders-are-essential-and-other-open-source-product-truths/
Freeloaders are Essential and Other Open Source Product Truths from Stephen Walli
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Scale14x Patterns and Practices for Open Source Project Success /slideshow/scale14x-patterns-and-practices-for-open-source-project-success/57927480 scale14x-final-160205154733
There are two parts to the success of an open source software project: Deployment growth: One publishes software to see it used. As the software is used, it reflects the dynamic nature of software, and is used in new ways to solve new problems. This leads to the second part of the success formula -- contributions. Contribution flow: A free or open source software project is at its simplest a discussion in software, and without contributions the conversation fades and fails. From a more complex community perspective, a FOSS project is about the economics of collaborative innovation and development. Without a continuous contribution flow, the dynamic aspect of a software project will become static and brittle and lose its relevancy. There are three on ramps to be built to drive the success of an open source project: Bringing new users to the project, enabling developers, and encouraging contributors. This talk looks at how these on ramps can be organized to drive growth and adoption, and to grow a successful and vibrant community around an open source project. The talk was delivered at SCaLE 14x: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/14x/presentations/patterns-and-practices-open-source-project-success]]>

There are two parts to the success of an open source software project: Deployment growth: One publishes software to see it used. As the software is used, it reflects the dynamic nature of software, and is used in new ways to solve new problems. This leads to the second part of the success formula -- contributions. Contribution flow: A free or open source software project is at its simplest a discussion in software, and without contributions the conversation fades and fails. From a more complex community perspective, a FOSS project is about the economics of collaborative innovation and development. Without a continuous contribution flow, the dynamic aspect of a software project will become static and brittle and lose its relevancy. There are three on ramps to be built to drive the success of an open source project: Bringing new users to the project, enabling developers, and encouraging contributors. This talk looks at how these on ramps can be organized to drive growth and adoption, and to grow a successful and vibrant community around an open source project. The talk was delivered at SCaLE 14x: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/14x/presentations/patterns-and-practices-open-source-project-success]]>
Fri, 05 Feb 2016 15:47:33 GMT /slideshow/scale14x-patterns-and-practices-for-open-source-project-success/57927480 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Scale14x Patterns and Practices for Open Source Project Success stephenrwalli There are two parts to the success of an open source software project: Deployment growth: One publishes software to see it used. As the software is used, it reflects the dynamic nature of software, and is used in new ways to solve new problems. This leads to the second part of the success formula -- contributions. Contribution flow: A free or open source software project is at its simplest a discussion in software, and without contributions the conversation fades and fails. From a more complex community perspective, a FOSS project is about the economics of collaborative innovation and development. Without a continuous contribution flow, the dynamic aspect of a software project will become static and brittle and lose its relevancy. There are three on ramps to be built to drive the success of an open source project: Bringing new users to the project, enabling developers, and encouraging contributors. This talk looks at how these on ramps can be organized to drive growth and adoption, and to grow a successful and vibrant community around an open source project. The talk was delivered at SCaLE 14x: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/14x/presentations/patterns-and-practices-open-source-project-success <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/scale14x-final-160205154733-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> There are two parts to the success of an open source software project: Deployment growth: One publishes software to see it used. As the software is used, it reflects the dynamic nature of software, and is used in new ways to solve new problems. This leads to the second part of the success formula -- contributions. Contribution flow: A free or open source software project is at its simplest a discussion in software, and without contributions the conversation fades and fails. From a more complex community perspective, a FOSS project is about the economics of collaborative innovation and development. Without a continuous contribution flow, the dynamic aspect of a software project will become static and brittle and lose its relevancy. There are three on ramps to be built to drive the success of an open source project: Bringing new users to the project, enabling developers, and encouraging contributors. This talk looks at how these on ramps can be organized to drive growth and adoption, and to grow a successful and vibrant community around an open source project. The talk was delivered at SCaLE 14x: https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/14x/presentations/patterns-and-practices-open-source-project-success
Scale14x Patterns and Practices for Open Source Project Success from Stephen Walli
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Turning Pets into Cattle: A Demonstration to Provoke Discussion /slideshow/turning-pets-into-cattle-a-demonstration-to-provoke-discussion/54752528 presentationturningpetsintocattle-151104210821-lva1-app6891
There have been lots of discussions in the cloud world about traditional 3-tier application workloads that are highly managed (i.e. Pets) and their modern web-counterpart workloads that are scalable, resilient, and fault tolerant (i.e. Cattle). But how does one migrate business critical applications from a "simple" virtualized world into a hybrid-cloud based on OpenStack? This talk walks through moving a running web application from one such virtualized 3-tier world into an OpenStack-based cloud world and the sorts of changes that need to be considered for re-architecting the app and re-deploying it into the cloud. The steps are meant to provoke conversations and should not be considered a recipe book. Video is here: https://www.openstack.org/summit/tokyo-2015/videos/presentation/turning-pets-into-cattle-a-demonstration-to-provoke-discussion]]>

There have been lots of discussions in the cloud world about traditional 3-tier application workloads that are highly managed (i.e. Pets) and their modern web-counterpart workloads that are scalable, resilient, and fault tolerant (i.e. Cattle). But how does one migrate business critical applications from a "simple" virtualized world into a hybrid-cloud based on OpenStack? This talk walks through moving a running web application from one such virtualized 3-tier world into an OpenStack-based cloud world and the sorts of changes that need to be considered for re-architecting the app and re-deploying it into the cloud. The steps are meant to provoke conversations and should not be considered a recipe book. Video is here: https://www.openstack.org/summit/tokyo-2015/videos/presentation/turning-pets-into-cattle-a-demonstration-to-provoke-discussion]]>
Wed, 04 Nov 2015 21:08:21 GMT /slideshow/turning-pets-into-cattle-a-demonstration-to-provoke-discussion/54752528 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Turning Pets into Cattle: A Demonstration to Provoke Discussion stephenrwalli There have been lots of discussions in the cloud world about traditional 3-tier application workloads that are highly managed (i.e. Pets) and their modern web-counterpart workloads that are scalable, resilient, and fault tolerant (i.e. Cattle). But how does one migrate business critical applications from a "simple" virtualized world into a hybrid-cloud based on OpenStack? This talk walks through moving a running web application from one such virtualized 3-tier world into an OpenStack-based cloud world and the sorts of changes that need to be considered for re-architecting the app and re-deploying it into the cloud. The steps are meant to provoke conversations and should not be considered a recipe book. Video is here: https://www.openstack.org/summit/tokyo-2015/videos/presentation/turning-pets-into-cattle-a-demonstration-to-provoke-discussion <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/presentationturningpetsintocattle-151104210821-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> There have been lots of discussions in the cloud world about traditional 3-tier application workloads that are highly managed (i.e. Pets) and their modern web-counterpart workloads that are scalable, resilient, and fault tolerant (i.e. Cattle). But how does one migrate business critical applications from a &quot;simple&quot; virtualized world into a hybrid-cloud based on OpenStack? This talk walks through moving a running web application from one such virtualized 3-tier world into an OpenStack-based cloud world and the sorts of changes that need to be considered for re-architecting the app and re-deploying it into the cloud. The steps are meant to provoke conversations and should not be considered a recipe book. Video is here: https://www.openstack.org/summit/tokyo-2015/videos/presentation/turning-pets-into-cattle-a-demonstration-to-provoke-discussion
Turning Pets into Cattle: A Demonstration to Provoke Discussion from Stephen Walli
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Patterns for Open Source Success /slideshow/patterns-for-open-source-success/21122528 oscf-outerconf2013-130513150107-phpapp01
There are a set of patterns that successful open source software projects follow. These activities can be organized as software construction, community development, and IP management activities. This talk explores their connections to build on ramps for community success . Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPjvLnJSn7U]]>

There are a set of patterns that successful open source software projects follow. These activities can be organized as software construction, community development, and IP management activities. This talk explores their connections to build on ramps for community success . Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPjvLnJSn7U]]>
Mon, 13 May 2013 15:01:07 GMT /slideshow/patterns-for-open-source-success/21122528 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Patterns for Open Source Success stephenrwalli There are a set of patterns that successful open source software projects follow. These activities can be organized as software construction, community development, and IP management activities. This talk explores their connections to build on ramps for community success . Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPjvLnJSn7U <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/oscf-outerconf2013-130513150107-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> There are a set of patterns that successful open source software projects follow. These activities can be organized as software construction, community development, and IP management activities. This talk explores their connections to build on ramps for community success . Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPjvLnJSn7U
Patterns for Open Source Success from Stephen Walli
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The Evolution of the Open Source Software Foundation /slideshow/foss-foundations-scale11/17988215 fossfoundations-scale11-130401050016-phpapp01
When FOSS project communities reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software IP management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. (Conference Details: http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale11x/presentations/evolution-open-source-software-foundation)]]>

When FOSS project communities reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software IP management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. (Conference Details: http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale11x/presentations/evolution-open-source-software-foundation)]]>
Mon, 01 Apr 2013 05:00:16 GMT /slideshow/foss-foundations-scale11/17988215 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) The Evolution of the Open Source Software Foundation stephenrwalli When FOSS project communities reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software IP management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. (Conference Details: http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale11x/presentations/evolution-open-source-software-foundation) <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/fossfoundations-scale11-130401050016-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> When FOSS project communities reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software IP management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. (Conference Details: http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale11x/presentations/evolution-open-source-software-foundation)
The Evolution of the Open Source Software Foundation from Stephen Walli
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The Rise and Evolution of the Open Source Software Foundation /stephenrwalli/the-rise-and-evolution-of-the-open-source-software-foundation eole12-fossfoundations-121015070516-phpapp01
Free and open source software (FOSS) project communities continue to grow and thrive. When such projects reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software intellectual property (IP) management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. This presentation reviews how such neutral non-profit organizations have grown to meet the evolving legal, business, and technical needs of FOSS communities and businesses.]]>

Free and open source software (FOSS) project communities continue to grow and thrive. When such projects reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software intellectual property (IP) management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. This presentation reviews how such neutral non-profit organizations have grown to meet the evolving legal, business, and technical needs of FOSS communities and businesses.]]>
Mon, 15 Oct 2012 07:05:14 GMT /stephenrwalli/the-rise-and-evolution-of-the-open-source-software-foundation stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) The Rise and Evolution of the Open Source Software Foundation stephenrwalli Free and open source software (FOSS) project communities continue to grow and thrive. When such projects reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software intellectual property (IP) management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. This presentation reviews how such neutral non-profit organizations have grown to meet the evolving legal, business, and technical needs of FOSS communities and businesses. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/eole12-fossfoundations-121015070516-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Free and open source software (FOSS) project communities continue to grow and thrive. When such projects reach a certain critical point in their growth, corporations express interest in participating. Corporations have more stringent and robust software intellectual property (IP) management needs, however, and projects are not always up to the task. Neutral non-profit FOSS foundations have proved to be a solution to these problems, providing for the IP management needs of corporations while offering additional business and technical services to the project communities to encourage further growth and adoption. This presentation reviews how such neutral non-profit organizations have grown to meet the evolving legal, business, and technical needs of FOSS communities and businesses.
The Rise and Evolution of the Open Source Software Foundation from Stephen Walli
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FOSS Foundations Enable Community Growth /slideshow/foss-foundations-enable-community-growth/9459026 owf11-fossfoundations-110928094725-phpapp01
A talk I gave at Open World Forum 2011, Paris. FOSS projects grow until they reach a certain size but can grow no further. FOSS Foundations enable projects to grow to reach their potential by providing the legal structures and tools to enable corporate contribution and wider adoption. This talk looks at a brief history of foundations in the FOSS space, and what tools they provide to help community projects grow. ]]>

A talk I gave at Open World Forum 2011, Paris. FOSS projects grow until they reach a certain size but can grow no further. FOSS Foundations enable projects to grow to reach their potential by providing the legal structures and tools to enable corporate contribution and wider adoption. This talk looks at a brief history of foundations in the FOSS space, and what tools they provide to help community projects grow. ]]>
Wed, 28 Sep 2011 09:47:22 GMT /slideshow/foss-foundations-enable-community-growth/9459026 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) FOSS Foundations Enable Community Growth stephenrwalli A talk I gave at Open World Forum 2011, Paris. FOSS projects grow until they reach a certain size but can grow no further. FOSS Foundations enable projects to grow to reach their potential by providing the legal structures and tools to enable corporate contribution and wider adoption. This talk looks at a brief history of foundations in the FOSS space, and what tools they provide to help community projects grow. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/owf11-fossfoundations-110928094725-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A talk I gave at Open World Forum 2011, Paris. FOSS projects grow until they reach a certain size but can grow no further. FOSS Foundations enable projects to grow to reach their potential by providing the legal structures and tools to enable corporate contribution and wider adoption. This talk looks at a brief history of foundations in the FOSS space, and what tools they provide to help community projects grow.
FOSS Foundations Enable Community Growth from Stephen Walli
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Symbian: collaboration, open, closed, dead? /slideshow/symbian-collaboration-open-closed-dead/9176201 transfersummit11-110908080506-phpapp02
Talk I gave at the Transfer Summit/UK conference: http://www.transfersummit.com/ ]]>

Talk I gave at the Transfer Summit/UK conference: http://www.transfersummit.com/ ]]>
Thu, 08 Sep 2011 08:05:03 GMT /slideshow/symbian-collaboration-open-closed-dead/9176201 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Symbian: collaboration, open, closed, dead? stephenrwalli Talk I gave at the Transfer Summit/UK conference: http://www.transfersummit.com/ <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/transfersummit11-110908080506-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Talk I gave at the Transfer Summit/UK conference: http://www.transfersummit.com/
Symbian: collaboration, open, closed, dead? from Stephen Walli
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Open Source Software Economics, Standards, and IP in One Lesson /slideshow/open-source-software-economics-standards-and-ip-in-one-lesson/533950 ossstdsiposcon-1217368382424662-9
Talk I gave at OSCON 2008. http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2008/public/schedule/detail/2313]]>

Talk I gave at OSCON 2008. http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2008/public/schedule/detail/2313]]>
Tue, 29 Jul 2008 14:49:05 GMT /slideshow/open-source-software-economics-standards-and-ip-in-one-lesson/533950 stephenrwalli@slideshare.net(stephenrwalli) Open Source Software Economics, Standards, and IP in One Lesson stephenrwalli Talk I gave at OSCON 2008. http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2008/public/schedule/detail/2313 <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ossstdsiposcon-1217368382424662-9-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Talk I gave at OSCON 2008. http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2008/public/schedule/detail/2313
Open Source Software Economics, Standards, and IP in One Lesson from Stephen Walli
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-stephenrwalli-48x48.jpg?cb=1666236318 I am a technical executive, a founder and consultant, a writer and author, a systems developer, a software construction geek, and a standards diplomat. I love to build teams, and products that make customers ecstatic. I have worked in the IT industry since 1980 as both customer and vendor. I was a Distinguished Technologist at Hewlett Packard Enterprise. The development of the Chinese software market remains an area of deep interest for me. As well, I have had the privilege of working with software start-ups in Finland and Spain. I blog about free and open source software, business and software development, and standards at "Once More unto the Breach" [http://stephesblog.blogs.com/]. ... stephesblog.blogs.com https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/maslow-fin-221020033149-6924c17b-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/avoiding-maslows-hammer-or-the-problem-of-the-birmingham-screwdriver-in-open-source-nonprofits/253722853 Avoiding Maslows Hamm... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/mvg-sarah-stephe-201026182745-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/minimum-viable-governance/238979482 Minimum Viable Governance https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/softwarefreedominapostossworld-200430003332-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/software-freedom-in-a-post-open-source-world/232873563 Software Freedom in a ...