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2008 Retrospective

I wrote this retrospective recently for a Board committee, and Doug Gaff gave me the excellent suggestion that I blog it. I am sure that it is of interest to many in the community.

The following is a listing of the 2008 objectives set by the Board for the Foundation staff, and some thoughts on our accomplishments. I have to say that I think 2008 was a pretty darn good year for the team. Perhaps not an outstanding year, but an awfully good one. We got a lot of things done, and have really set the stage for future growth.

I am sure that I have forgotten some major accomplishments. My apologies in advance!

2008 Annual Objectives Completion

1. Help ship a great Ganymede release train

Thanks to a lot of great work by the project committers, the Ganymede release train went off without a hitch and by any measure was a great success. The Foundation staff contributed to that success in a number of significant areas:

2. Maintain the financial and organizational health of the Foundation

There is a lot of work that happens behind the scenes to ensure that the Eclipse Foundation is a well run business. The fact that we’re a not-for-profit doesn’t mean that good management isn’t required to ensure that we keep the lights on, and our services to the community running. Here are few highlights:

3. Grow membership and communicate membership value

The membership of the Eclipse Foundation is what funds Eclipse and what supports the operations of the Eclipse Foundation. If you (the reader) work at a company which supports Eclipse through being an active member please accept our deeply felt “thank you!” for your generous support.

4. Implement programs to focus growth in industry verticals

Much of the future potential growth of Eclipse is in industry verticals. Our strategic direction is to take the Eclipse model of collaborative open development to these industries and help them be successful in using open source to create industry platforms.

5. Sustain and grow our technical community

Eclipse lives or dies based on how vibrant our technical community is. Ensuring that we have sustainable growth in our project and committer population is a big part of what we try to do at Eclipse. To all of the developers (member employees, individuals and students) who work on or contribute to Eclipse projects thank you for your energy and enthusiasm. You are what keeps Eclipse fresh and exciting!

6. Foster Eclipse’s growth as an OSGi-based multi-tier runtime platform and community

I think that this is pretty self-explanatory. 2008 was the year that Eclipse runtime technology really took on its own identity. Which is major step forward.

7. Improve committer satisfaction with Foundation processes and procedures

I know Eclipse has a lot of processes. In many ways those processes are what differentiates Eclipse and helps make it a unique place. But at the same time those processes can run the risk of creating unnecessary barriers to entry to participation and contribution to Eclipse. Balancing all of the interests is tough, but I really think that in 2008 we made some significant enhancements.

8. University outreach program

We actually accomplished a lot on university outreach in 2008. I don’t think we necessarily did a good enough job in communicating everything that we did, so hopefully the links below will help a little in that regard.

Posted April 17th, 2009 by Mike Milinkovich in category: Foundation
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2 Responses to “2008 Retrospective”


  1. Doug Says:

    Thanks for posting Mike. It’s really impressive how much the Eclipse Foundation accomplishes in a year. The community should be proud.


  2. Topics about Douglas-schools » Planet Eclipse: Mike Milinkovich: 2008 Retrospective Says:

    [...] iSportacus created an interesting post today on Planet Eclipse: Mike Milinkovich: 2008 RetrospectiveHere’s a short outlineI wrote this retrospective recently for a Board committee, and Doug Gaff gave me the excellent suggestion that I blog it. [...]

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