The old FSG board had 9 members, and the OSDL board had 14 (later 12) members. The carryovers to the 14-member 15-member LF board are unsurprising:
- James Bottomley (SteelEye), Dan Frye (IBM), Hsashi Hashimoto (Hitachi) and Tsugikazu Shibata (NEC) from the OSDL board;
- Mark Shuttleworth (Ubuntu) and Andrew Updegrove (law firm Gesmer Updegrove) from the FSG board;
- Masahiro Date (Fujitsu) and Markus Rex (Novell, formerly of SuSE) from both boards; and
- Doug Fisher of Intel, replacing two Intel representative: Fisher (former OSDL chairman) and Dirk Hohndel (of FSG)
- Christine Martino of HP replaces Steve Geary of HP from both boards;
- Wim Coekaerts, the main Linux person at Oracle;
- Christy Wyatt of Motorola;
- Tim Golden of Bank of America;
- Brian Pawlowski of NetApp; and
- Marc Miller of AMD. This never would have happened at OSDL with Intel as one of its key founders and one of the largest (if not the largest) investor.
- From FSG: Theodore Ts'o (top Linux lieutenant) and two nonprofit reps, Jim Lacey of the Linux Professional Institute and John Weathersby of the Open Source Software Institute;
- From OSDL: Stuart Cohen (who quit as CEO in December), his predecessor Jerry Greenberg (ex-TurboLinux, later OSDL CEO from 2002 to 2003), Larry Augustin (founder of VA Software), and Frank Fanzilli (retired CIO of CSFB).
The eight Platinum members who pay $500k/year are each guaranteed a seat, which explains the holdovers (Fujitsu, Hitachi, HP, IBM, Intel, NEC, Novell) and the new Oracle rep. The Gold members who pay $200k/year are promised three seats: AMD, NetApp and BofA Motorola. The Silver who pay $20k/year get one director, apparently BofA. And then the three at large directors: one required by the bylaws to represent the technical advisory board (Bottomley) and two other at-large directors (Shuttleworth, Updegrove).
Another measure of who won the merger is infrastructure. The directory structure of www.Linux-Foundation.org is that of the old www.FreeStandards.org, and the LF headquarters is in San Francisco (as in FSG) and not Oregon (as was OSDL).
Update 8:30 p.m.: Mea culpa. I had several initial mistakes which led me to believe there was a gap between the bylaws and the new directors. The StandardsBlog posting omitted Wyatt of Motorola (a Gold member) and thus implied there were 14 members; the official press release is complete. Amanda McPherson of LF e-mailed to clarify that BofA is a Silver member (although they are still not listed among the official members on the website.)
Technorati Tags: consortia, Linux, open source, standardization
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments that are promoting a website or otherwise not responsive to the post will be deleted.