Facebook to evolve open source through ‘TO DO’ collaboration

FACEBOOK HAS ANNOUNCED a collaborative open source effort called "TO DO", which it said will help open source to evolve and increase its acceptance.

Facebook revealed "TO DO", or "talk openly, develop openly", on its engineering blog and it has the backing of Zuckerberg's mob and a bunch of other big hitters in Silicon Valley.

Dropbox, Github, Google, Khan Academy, Stripe, Square, Twitter, and Walmart Labs are all named as early movers in the "TO DO" party, and together they hope to "make open source easier for everyone".

"[Today] we joined a number of other companies in launching a new open source collaboration called TODO. The group was formed to address the challenges that companies like ours have encountered in consuming open source software and running open source programs," Facebook said.

"We'll have more to share about our plans in the coming weeks, but our overall goal in this collaboration is to make open source easier for everyone. We want to run better, more impactful open source programs in our own companies; we want to make it easier for people to consume the technologies we open source; and we want to help create a roadmap for companies that want to create their open source programs but aren't sure how to proceed."

Interested parties are invited to join, to get in at the start of this evolution. Facebook open source chap James Pearce said that there is a lot of work in front of them.

"There's a lot of work to do here, and we hope that more companies will join and help us turn this into something amazing," he said.

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Facebook to evolve open source through 'TO DO' collaboration

Facebook’s TODO project is a big push to evolve the world of open source

Facebook has partnered with several large companies to kick off a new project called TODO that aims to improve the way open source software is developed and consumed.

Facebook, Google and many other big businesses have come to rely on open source projects, such as the MySQL database, to run their businesses, and particularly their online operations.

But they apparently feel theres room to improve how open source projects are managed and organized, and even room to improve the software itself. The TODO projectwhich stands for Talk Openly, Develop Openlyaddresses those goals.

We want to figure out how we can raise the bar on the quality of open-source software projects in the world, Jay Parikh, the head of Facebooks infrastructure group, said at a conference in San Francisco Monday.

The TODO project aims to make it easier for a company or organization to get started with using an open source package, and also make it easier to kick off new open source development projects.

The group consists mainly of the biggest online service providers, including Facebook, Twitter, Google and Box. It also includes Walmart Labs, Dropbox, Khan Academy, Stripe, Square and the open source software repository GitHub and others.

TODO is a new open source collaboration formed to address the challenges that companies have encountered in consuming open source software and running open source programs, Facebook said in a statement.

Separately on Monday, Facebook said it will open-source mcrouter, a memcached protocol router that Facebook uses to handle all traffic between its caching servers.

At peak massive scale, mcrouter handles close to five billion requests per second, the company said. More information can be found in the blog post here.

Facebook made its announcements at its @Scale conference, which brings together companies that operate at Web scale to talk about how they run their operations.

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Facebook's TODO project is a big push to evolve the world of open source

Softarex Technologies Announces Collaboration in the Healthcare Technology Industry

Alexandria, VA (PRWEB) September 12, 2014

Softarex Technologies Inc. is pleased to announce that they have become a member of the Open Health Tools (OHT) community in May 2014. Open Health Tools is an open source community of software developers that designs and develops open standards based technology that meets interoperability requirements for early adopters. With this membership we are able to successfully participate in developing open source software for the community.

We are proud to be a part of the Open Health Tools community, which combines major health providers from different countries and regions, health professionals, health standards organizations, vendors, as well as open source developers, said Sergei Dubograev, Vice President of Softarex Technologies Inc. Its a great opportunity to share and implement all the profound experience our team has gained in years of developing software for the healthcare industry. We are excited to focus together with other OHT open source developers on developing Health Information Platforms of frameworks, exemplary tools and reference applications that make it easy and cost effective to build and deploy software in todays connected and unconnected world.

One of the main goals of Open Health Tools is to combine open standards programs, open source development, multiple cooperating vendors and major health consumers into successful software technology deliverables.

ABOUT SOFTAREX TECHNOLOGIES INC. Softarex Technologies Inc. delivers world-class custom software solutions and new innovative software products. Softarexs development team has more than 20 years of experience enabling complex IT solutions across a wide range of industries. Our engineers, some of the best in the world, have a high-level of expertise in Healthcare, Multimedia, Communications, e-Learning and Manufacturing. Our specialists have collected a vast knowledgebase of expertise for the development of different systems. They are not only capable of developing software code, but they are proficient in the implementation of specialized algorithms, and the mathematical models used when defining new software.

ABOUT OHT Open Health Tools (http://www.openhealthtools.org) was formed and announced in 2007 with the vision to enable a ubiquitous ecosystem where members of the Health and IT professions can collaborate to build open, standards-based interoperable systems that enable patients and their care providers to have access to vital and reliable medical information at the time and place it is needed.

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Softarex Technologies Announces Collaboration in the Healthcare Technology Industry

List of free and open-source software packages – Wikipedia …

This article is about software free to be modified and distributed. For examples of software free in the monetary sense, see List of freeware.

This is a list of free and open source software packages: computer software licensed under free software licenses and open source licenses. Software that fits the Free Software Definition may be more appropriately called free software; the GNU project in particular objects to their works being referred to as open source.[1] For more information about the philosophical background for open source software, see free software movement and Open Source Initiative. However, nearly all software meeting the Free Software Definition also meets the Open Source Definition and vice versa. A small fraction of the software that meets either definition is listed here.

Some of the Open Source applications are also the basis of commercial products, shown in the List of commercial open-source applications and services.

Be advised that available distributions of these systems can contain, or offer to build and install, added software that is neither free software nor open source.

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List of free and open-source software packages - Wikipedia ...

HP embraces open source in the cloud with Eucalyptus acquisition

There was a time, when open source software was synonymous with being cheap or on the fringe. In other words, companies embraced closed source options, because that was the thing to do -- there were not many options. Quite frankly, I do not blame businesses for playing it safe.

Today however, open source software and technologies, including Linux, areviable and attractive options. Companies like Red Hat have paved the way for others to move open source from the fringe to the spotlight. Today, major player HPacquires a company namedEucalyptus to bolster its open source technology in the cloud.

"Eucalyptus and HP share a common vision for the future of cloud in the enterprise. Enterprises are demanding open source cloud solutions, and Im thrilled to have this opportunity to grow the HP Helion portfolio and lead a world-class business that delivers private, hybrid, managed and public clouds to enterprise customers worldwide", saysMarten Mickos, CEO, Eucalyptus.

Martin Fink, CTO, HP explains, "we've said before that we believe the future of the Cloud is open source, and this transaction underscores our deep commitment to helping customers build enterprise-class, open clouds their way. We've already seen significant momentum since launching HP Helion and have put in place an outstanding team. Im confident that Marten, a fellow open source devotee, will continue to build out the HP Helion portfolio into the enterprise cloud offering of choice".

Clearly, HP is saying all the right things, and open source fans should be excited by the acquisition. The corporate world seems to be turning to open source technologies more and more. When it comes to the cloud and data storage, it is understandable that companies are hesitant to potentially get stuck ina closed source, proprietary deal. Embracing open source mayallow greater flexibility and control.

Image Credit:alexmillos/Shutterstock

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HP embraces open source in the cloud with Eucalyptus acquisition

VMware lays out four-part growth strategy

As hypervisors move toward commodity status and competitors Microsoft Azure and open source KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) gain market share, VMware presented a vision of its future at the VMworld conference last week based on four initiatives: the software-defined data center (SDDC), open source including Docker, hybrid cloud, and virtualized desktops.

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The most obvious opportunity for VMware is SDDC. It builds directly on top of vCenter, with VSAN in storage and NSX network virtualization, which came from the Nicira acquisition in 2012. The dam broke six months ago, and weve arrived with a $100 million run rate and wins in every vertical, said Martin Casado, Nicira co-founder and VMware Networking SVP and general manageron theCUBE. He said the turning point came when VMware released an NSX version that supports vSphere and has most of the bells and whistles users want nine months ago. Since then it has announced partnerships with several industry players including Hewlett-Packard Co.and Arista Networks, Inc.

NSX faces stiff competition from Cisco Systems, Inc., whoseApplication Centric Infrastructure (ACI) takes a different approach to network virtualization, and the competition may be slowing market acceptance of bothsystems. Network virtualization is lagging behind server and storage virtualization, said Howie Xu, senior director of engineering for Ciscos Cloud Networking and Services Groupon theCUBE. Scott McIsaac, CTO of Secure 24 said the fight between Cisco and VMware over software-defined networking is freezing the market.And during the final wrap-up of theCUBEs coverage, Wikibon Principal Research Director Stuart Miniman said he had talked to a CIO whoseshop used both VMware and Cisco and who said, I wont buy software-defined networking until they stop throwing stones at each other.

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VMware also advanced its embrace of open source software with the announcement that itwould support Docker, an open-source application container. Docker is sometimes portrayed as a potential disruptor for VMware and the virtualization market in general. However, spokespeople for both companies portrayed the technologies as complimentary. VMware is focused on traditional stateful applications, while Docker works with the new stateless, Web-based applications, said Wikibon CEO David Vellante. VMwares decisions to support Docker was a smart move, he said, allowing containerized stateless applications to run on premise in enterprises on top of VMware.

Third-generation developers see containers as a cool way to package applications over time, said VMware CEO Pat Gelsinger on theCUBE.If that is how people want to deliver applications, then we want to be there: Containers without compromise on top of VMware.

The move is also good for Docker, said Chris Wolf, Americas CTO for VMware and a former Gartner analyst. Docker focuses on the application and does not touch the underlying infrastructure. With stateless applications running on the public cloud, the underlying IaaS platform supplies those services. The same applies on-premise, where VMware can provide those underlying services and shield the container from the infrastructure, he said. This can also allow developers to use Docker with on-premise stateful applications.

Regarding the larger issue EMCs and VMwares somewhat reluctant embrace of open source technology, Wolf said customer defection isnt a worry. Our SDDC value proposition is so compelling we will win that stack on merit, he said. Customers wont pull out of SDDC because they wont want to, not because they cant.

Ed. Note: This is the first of a two part series on VMwares transition plan as outlined at VMworld 2014 on theCUBE. The second part covers vCloud Air and VMware Horizon Desktop-as-a-Service.

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VMware lays out four-part growth strategy

Out in the Open: A Free Platform for Building Gear on the Internet of Things

The trouble with the Internet of Things is that the things dont really talk to each other.

New devices like the Nest thermostat, the Dropcam camera, and various wearables do a pretty good job of talking to the internet, letting you easily monitor and use them through online dashboards. But such tools would be so much more useful if they also traded information on their own. Its nice if you car tires let you know when theyre low via a web dashboard. But its even nicer if they can tell an air compressor exactly how much air they need and whose bank account to bill for it.

Thats the kind of digital utopia sought by the creators of Zetta, a new open source project that provides common tools for building internet-connected devices that can talk to each other, including everything from home automation contraptions to flying drones. Driven by a company called Apigee, the project made its official debut this morning.

Other projects and services seek much the same utopia. The average consumer can use a service called IFTTT to link devices like the Nest thermostat and the Philips Hue lighting system. More accomplished techies setup more complex interactions through Octoblu, formerly known as SkyNet, an open source system for controlling hardware over the internet. And behind the scenes, companies like Nest, now owned by Google, are now offering APIs, or application programming interfaces, for their devices that let the worlds developers create new ways of interacting with them. With Zetta, Apigee wants to help bring these kinds of APIs to far more devices.

Apigee has long been in the business of web APIs, which are basically ways for software developers to make one application talk with another. APIs are how companies plug their apps into services like Twitter, and increasingly, theyre how data scientists pull information from government websites for analysis. Apigee helps companies create and maintain APIs, and though it typically does this for more traditional online services, and it now wants to expand into the Internet of Things.

Basically, with Zetta, its offering tools that lets anyone build devices that can interact with the larger Internet of Things through APIs. This includes a set of specifications for creating APIsspecifications it is committing to the API Commons, a collection of designs that can be freely reused without license fees. But the company is also offering open source software that can run on devices, helping to handle much of the work that goes into an API.

According Apigee vice president Brian Mulloy, the strength of the platform is that its well suited juggle many different types of communicationsomething that can help link disparate devices. What our platform is really smart about is cross-mediating between different protocols, he says.

The Zetta software will run on cheap, low-end hardware such as the Raspberry Pi and the Beaglebone, passing messages from the hardware either directly to other devices or with servers hosted in the cloud or even your living room. Apigee will try to make money from the project by offering to host online services that plug into this software, but the software and its source code will be available for anyone to use for free.

The project is still in the early stages, but Tim Ryan, one of the creators of Internet of Things hardware platform called Tessel believes it can push this market forward. Building your own devices and APIs can be tricky, and theres no standard way of doing it, he says. Zetta could make that easier.

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Out in the Open: A Free Platform for Building Gear on the Internet of Things

Chef muscles up with Microsoft, Amazon

Chef, a popular open source software program for managing the configuration settings of servers, software and other IT components, now can reach deeper into the data center with the help of some intertwined services from Microsoft, VMware and Amazon Web Services (AWS).

Chef 12, released Monday, also comes with a new licensing model that should make it easier for customers to add or remove premium features.

The Chef IT automation software provides a way for administrators to write scripts, often called recipes, to configure and deploy a new piece of equipment or software. Recipes can be used to automate the management of large numbers of assets.

Since its initial release in 2009, Chef has been downloaded over 10 million times. It is used by companies such as Facebook, Hewlett-Packard, Rackspace, AirBnB and others.

To extend the capabilities of Chef, the company has leveraged resources offered by other IT vendors.

For instance, a backup copy of Chef can now be stored and run on AWS Elastic Block Storage (EBS).

Should the main Chef server go down, operations can shift to EBS. Organizations can set up copies of the Chef server in different geographic areas, for extra protection in times of disaster.

Eventually, Chef will also support block storage services from other cloud services as well.

A new replication feature allows users to synchronize configuration data across multiple Chef servers, which can provide a single set of policies across all the locations being managed by Chef.

You could use a single Chef server as a central location for developing policies for configuration and management, said Colin Campbell, Chef director of patterns and practices.

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Chef muscles up with Microsoft, Amazon

A visual history of open source

September 08, 2014, 10:56 AM The open source movement has brought good things to the lives of countless people around the world. But have you ever wondered how it all got started? Check out this infographic that walks you through the birth of open source in the 1950s to today's thriving open source world.

According to Piktochart:

From operating systems to development tools and programming languages to browsers and thousands of utilities and applications, Open Source has led the way. Now, discover the movement's history.

More at Piktochart

Image credit: InformIT

Hat tip: Arccore on Google+

Note that I've only included a small chunk of the infographic in the quote box above. Be sure to click through to see the entire thing. I think it's a great visual representation of how far open source has come over the years.

The infographic is based on five Wikipedia articles. Here are links to each of them if you want to enjoy some additional reading:

GNU Project Open Source Free Software Movement History of Free and Open Source Software Open Source Initiative

LibreOffice 4.0 versus Microsoft Office 2013 Technology Personalized compares LibreOffice 4.0 to Microsoft Office 2013, and finds that LibreOffice 4.0 holds its own against Microsoft's office suite.

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A visual history of open source