‘Code Free for India’ initiative launched

Thiruvananthapuram, Sept 19:

International Centre for Free and Open Source Software at Technopark here has announced the launch of a new initiative called Code Free for India'.

As part of this, programmers from free software community will be invited to develop tools and applications for desktop, nternet, mobile, cloud, and Internet-of-Things for use by the civil society, government and institutions.

Software freedom

The initiative is timed with the celebration of the Software Freedom Day tomorrow (September 20) by the Free Software Centre and the Free Software User Group here.

The Code Free for India initiative will provide a broad umbrella for the free software community members and groups to address the local issues and needs, says Satish Babu, Director of the Free Software Centre.

It will provide a platform for initiatives proven successful locally to scale up to state or national levels.

It will also encourage the use of local language computing tools and contemporary free software technology, while keeping in mind bandwidth and device limitations.

Annual event

Software Freedom Day is an annual event coordinated by Software Freedom International, a non-profit organisation working towards promoting free software.

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‘Code Free for India’ initiative launched

US software giant buys Waterford firm for €63.5m

A Waterford-based mobile software company was yesterday bought by US open source software giant Red Hat in a deal worth 63.5m.

FeedHenry which specialises in enterprise-focused mobile app platforms has agreed a deal with the US firm which it expects to close next year.

The acquisition will expand Red Hats portfolio of app development, integration and platform-as-a-service (PaaS) solutions, according to the company.

The mobile application platform is one of the fastest growing segments of the enterprise software market. As mobile devices have penetrated into every aspect of enterprise computing, enterprise software customers are looking for easier and more efficient ways for their developers to build mobile applications that extend and enhance traditional enterprise applications. FeedHenry will help us enable customers to take advantage of the capabilities of mobile with the security, scalability, and reliability of Red Hat enterprise software, said Red Hat application platform business senior vice president, Craig Muzilla.

FeedHenry, which employs 60 people across the UK, Ireland and the US, is a leading developer of cloud mobile application platforms for large companies.

The company which was spun out of Waterford Institute of Technologys Telecommunications Software and Systems Group also allows developers to create native apps as well as hybrid or web apps.

Commenting on the announcement, FeedHenry chief executive, Cathal McGloin said the move would enable the company to reach a wider audience.

We are excited to become part of Red Hat, the leader in open source enterprise solutions, and see this as confirmation of the combined power of mobile and cloud... we now have an opportunity to bring our leading mobile application platform to a wider audience of global customers and partners, to help them optimise for the mobile-first world, said Mr McGloin.

FeedHenry made an after-tax loss of 1.49m in 2012.

Irish Examiner Ltd. All rights reserved

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Wipro enters Open Source software for better margins

Bangalore September 16:

Wipro has launched a new practice with plans of developing open source software.

This practice will help its customers build Open Source-based platforms that enable online services on a higher scale, platforms that process big data and other kinds of services at beneficial price points, according to officials.

Further, Wipro will focus on software applications, IT infrastructure, Internet of Things (IoT), hardware and testing, company officials added. In the product engineering space, reusable or licensable IP blocks that can help shrink product development timelines for the consumer, automotive and networking market segments, said Bhanumurthy BM, Chief Executive, Application Services & Strategic Alliances, Wipro.

The adoption of open source-based technologies is a part of TK Kurien's strategy to get growth back on track with better margins, which he had outlined at the last quarter results. The company also said that it will make 'significant investments' but did not disclose the investment amount.

Industry watchers believe that the pace of adoption of open source software and methodologies led by advancements in analytics, cloud computing and the emerging Internet of Things (IoT) has been on the rise in the last few years as enterprises globally have been looking at software that can be used across different devices.

(This article was published on September 16, 2014)

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How Medieval-Style Guilds Will Remake the Tech Behind Facebook and Google

In his native England, James Pearce says, the guilds are everywhere.

Drawing on a practice that dates back to medieval times, a guild is a group of craftspeople or merchants whove banded together because they all do the same thing. One guild is for vintners, another for masons, and so on. There are hundreds of guilds across England, Pearce says, and each provides a way for craftspeople to share certain tricks of their craft. The members of a guild come together, he explains, to figure out how best to run their trades, to hone their operations in ways they couldnt hone them on their own.

So, when Pearce was named the head of open source at Facebook, charged with overseeing the vast collection of open source software that helps run one of the largest online operations on earth, he felt that something was missing. When I took over the Facebook open source portfolio, I was waiting for the invite, he says. I was like: Is someone going to invite me to the open source guild?

This is played for laughs. But Pearce felt a very real need for something akin to an open source software guild, so much so that he and Facebook have now started one. Known as TODO, this new group made its debut yesterday at an event for hardcore web engineers hosted by Facebook, and it spans some of the biggest names in tech, including Google, Twitter, Dropbox, and GitHub. In one sense, this is a small thing. But in the long run, given the egalitarian nature of open source software, it could benefit practically any company that relies on computer code.

A backronym for talk openly, develop openly, TODO aspires to fine tune the world of open source software, so that companies can more easily build online services for the modern ageand more easily share the tools they use to build such services. The hope is that this new-age guild will create a kind of feedback loop that will significantly expand the use of open source software, software thats freely available to everyone.

This group wants to help make open source better, Pearce says. And its in a position to do so. Today, the most important open source tools emerge from the online companies like Facebook, companies building software to solve problems no one else has ever faced.

There are many cross-company organizations focused on promoting open source software, including The Linux Foundation, the Apache Software Foundation, and the Free Software Foundation. But these are rather different from TODO. An independent organization like The Linux Foundation is a non-profit that oversees the development of particular open source software tools, such as the Linux operating system, the OS used to run so many of todays web services. By contrast, TODO is meant to help companies like Facebook and Google manage how they use of open source software and how they run their own their own open source projectsprojects that freely share the custom software theyve created to run their online operations.

Facebook, for instance, uses a wide range of seasoned open source software tools, from Linux to the MySQL database. But it has also built a wide range of tools needed to operate its worldwide social network, including everything from new databases to new tools for executing software code, and it has open sourced many of these, hoping that others can use them tooand help improve them by submitting additional code. With TODO, the company hopes to streamline how this software is shared with the larger world and, in the long run, ensure it get used by more people.

As Pearce explains, running an open source project isnt an easy thing. Facebook produces new software code for its own online empire on a daily basis, and it cant just lob this code onto the internet for others to use. Basically, Facebook needs are somewhat different from other companiesfor one thing, it moves at a much faster paceand that means it must develop additional tools for testing and managing code that gets shared online. This is hard problem, he says. But TODO, he believes, can help make it easier.

TODO isnt something the world of open source has seen before, says Chris Kelly, the head of open source at GitHub. This is somewhere in a new space that doesnt really exist yet, he says. Its a new domain for usa new wave for open source. The organization is still working out how it will operate. But the basic idea is thatrather than continually building new tools for using, testing, and sharing open source softwarethese companies can freely trade practices with each other. We just dont want to re-invent the wheel many times, Kelly says.

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How Medieval-Style Guilds Will Remake the Tech Behind Facebook and Google