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	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:forum-27643</id>
	<title>Nabble - OpenJDK Governance Board</title>
	<updated>2009-05-07T02:51:01Z</updated>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-23423458</id>
	<title>Happy dissolving</title>
	<published>2009-05-07T02:51:01Z</published>
	<updated>2009-05-07T02:51:01Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Wielaard</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Dear board,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I see today is officially the last day of the Governance Board and that
&lt;br&gt;the Interim GB shall be dissolved on 7 May 2009. What are your plans
&lt;br&gt;after today? Will there be a new board, a new constitution? Or have you
&lt;br&gt;decided to let this day pass without any ceremony?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Have a virtual beer from me, and happy dissolving.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Cheers,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Mark
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21547624</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-19T09:29:18Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-19T09:29:18Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Andy Tripp-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">I just want to thank Simon, David, and Mark R. for their responses.
&lt;br&gt;It can be tough to know what's going on for someone like who's 
&lt;br&gt;not really following closely.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Now, back to our regularly scheduled Harmony/Classpath flamewar...
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21541294</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-19T03:30:41Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-19T03:30:41Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Wielaard</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">On Mon, 2009-01-19 at 05:47 -0500, Geir Magnusson Jr. wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Who are the committers - who should be the decision makers in the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; OPenJDK community?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://db.openjdk.java.net/people&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://db.openjdk.java.net/people&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; How many don't work for Sun? &amp;nbsp;(And of those, how many didn't work for &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; sun in the past?)
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;About 15 I would say. And those that did work for Sun in the past are
&lt;br&gt;actually those that push the community the hardest and tell Sun exactly
&lt;br&gt;what is wrong if they see it. Look at all Martin's poking, helping and
&lt;br&gt;sponsorship of other peoples contributions.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; If through OpenJDK we can improve the process of producing
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; specs, the reference implementation and free test suites, then I am
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; all for it.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; You might argue that it's better, because you can get the TCK for use
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; in OpenJDK and derivatives
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; It is better because it is under terms that allow publishing any code
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that is tested and/or passes with it under a free software license &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; guarantees that the source, and not unimportantly, all patent claims
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; must be shared under reciprocal terms, without any restrictions on use
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; for any purpose by any user.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Have you read it? &amp;nbsp;There's no &amp;quot;any code&amp;quot;. &amp;nbsp;It allows you to test Sun's &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; code.
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;It allows testing and redistributing code derived from Sun's code, but
&lt;br&gt;you are free to combine it with any other code, given that the results
&lt;br&gt;are distributed under in a repricical way under the GPL so as to give
&lt;br&gt;anybody access to the code. Cacao and Jalimo which both use OpenJDK
&lt;br&gt;hybrids both got one. But the TCK is still proprietary and under NDA
&lt;br&gt;making it mostly useless for those working openly in the community.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; And no, it's the GPL v2, which has no clear patent language.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It has clear patent language (clause 7), it is even in the preemble of
&lt;br&gt;the GPL explaining that is the intend is: &amp;quot;we have made it clear that
&lt;br&gt;any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use&amp;quot; Which means the GPL
&lt;br&gt;acts like a patent shield for all that distribute code under it. But it
&lt;br&gt;doesn't have a clear patent retaliation clause, which is important to
&lt;br&gt;combat patent trolls, and why we should upgrade to GPLv3 over time.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;And of course there are other patent troll protections in place when
&lt;br&gt;combining with anything GCJ/GNU Classpath related, like those provided
&lt;br&gt;by the OIN foundation.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; People wanted to do something &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; that was different from what you were doing, and that was bad?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;No, people abused the existing community in the name of &amp;quot;Harmony&amp;quot;, but
&lt;br&gt;instead of creating Harmony tried to do a hostile takeover of that
&lt;br&gt;community and letting those who did aspire to create true harmony spin
&lt;br&gt;their wheels trying to derail any cooperation.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; IIRC, the Harmony community quickly passed the Classpath community in &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; terms of completeness.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You seem to recall incorrectly. Though there is some nice code in
&lt;br&gt;harmony now, it still isn't as deep and broad as what GNU Classpath &amp;
&lt;br&gt;friends are providing right now.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; I might not like
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;quot;software hoarding&amp;quot;, and I certainly prefer using copyleft licenses &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; are fairly reciprocal, but being expressly incompatible was what I
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; objected to.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; That's not what you said then. &amp;nbsp;You were very clear about not wanting &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; to contribute software that could be used by &amp;quot;software hoarders&amp;quot;.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Again, your memory seems to be faulty. It was the resistance to work
&lt;br&gt;together on technical terms with the rest of the libre-java community
&lt;br&gt;that I objected to and that finally let to most of the Harmony founders
&lt;br&gt;that already had harmony with the various other libre-java efforts
&lt;br&gt;leaving. As said before:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Please do reread &amp;quot;Toward a Free
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Java&amp;quot; &lt;a href=&quot;http://lwn.net/Articles/184967/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://lwn.net/Articles/184967/&lt;/a&gt;&amp;nbsp;if you don't get what the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; history is here.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Cheers,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Mark
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21538169</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-18T23:41:56Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-18T23:41:56Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Dave Gilbert-4</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Geir Magnusson Jr. wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; On Jan 16, 2009, at 5:55 PM, Mark Reinhold wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; The OpenJDK Governance Board (GB) has not met since last April because
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Sun has not yet appointed anyone to the two open GB seats. &amp;nbsp;Sun and the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; GB considered various candidates early on but then the effort faded into
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; the background over the summer in the face of more pressing issues.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; More pressing for whom? &amp;nbsp;the community or Sun?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; I still volunteer.
&lt;/div&gt;I volunteer also. &amp;nbsp;I've been a creator and consumer of Free and Open 
&lt;br&gt;Source Java software for almost 10 years and, like Geir, have a keen 
&lt;br&gt;interest in the success of the OpenJDK project.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Best regards,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Dave Gilbert
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.jfree.org/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.jfree.org/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21520711</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-17T13:07:18Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-17T13:07:18Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Wielaard</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Hi Geir,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On Sat, 2009-01-17 at 09:53 -0500, Geir Magnusson Jr. wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; What do you think we've been fighting for at the ASF for the last 8 &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; years, and specifically, the last 2 for the JCK?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I appreciate you trying to fight. And trying to change things from
&lt;br&gt;within the JCP. Which is indeed brave. You share that optimism with
&lt;br&gt;Dalibor who also always urges to not burn down that which produces bad
&lt;br&gt;results and be positive that change can happen. I might have become to
&lt;br&gt;cynical with the results not being free, open and community friendly
&lt;br&gt;over that many years, that I focus my efforts there where I can actually
&lt;br&gt;produce free code in the open. You risk legitimating an institution
&lt;br&gt;which doesn't guarantee software freedom without achieving any of your
&lt;br&gt;goals. And alienating the community that you say you are fighting for
&lt;br&gt;because you hide any talks and results behind the shadowy-cabal that you
&lt;br&gt;have become part of.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; If through OpenJDK we can improve the process of producing
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; specs, the reference implementation and free test suites, then I am &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; all for it.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; You might argue that it's better, because you can get the TCK for use &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; in OpenJDK and derivatives
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It is better because it is under terms that allow publishing any code
&lt;br&gt;that is tested and/or passes with it under a free software license that
&lt;br&gt;guarantees that the source, and not unimportantly, all patent claims
&lt;br&gt;must be shared under reciprocal terms, without any restrictions on use
&lt;br&gt;for any purpose by any user.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;That said the current terms are certainly not good enough. Having the
&lt;br&gt;TCK as proprietary software is bad, having people cut of from the rest
&lt;br&gt;of the community through NDAs is anti-social and not giving anybody the
&lt;br&gt;change to test any implementation as you wish is just very unfair and
&lt;br&gt;unproductive.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Another view is that they masterfully split the free/libre/open java &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; community, exploiting long-standing license fault-lines, in order to &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; counteract the threat that Harmony represented - a quality, performant &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; open source implementation with an *open, free community* under a &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; permissive license.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;We started Harmony to unite the various free java efforts that we were
&lt;br&gt;working on in the hope we could also work closer with the Apache
&lt;br&gt;community. That it then turned out to split the community with an
&lt;br&gt;apache-only effort was never what I, and other founders, like Dalibor
&lt;br&gt;and Tom, intended it to be. I am glad Sun talked to the libre-java
&lt;br&gt;community before starting their own effort and kept us in the loop about
&lt;br&gt;their plans and desires to work together. I am not saying the
&lt;br&gt;cooperation is perfect, there is a lot to improve. But we keep talking
&lt;br&gt;and trying to work together. Our renewed Fosdem talks cooperation is
&lt;br&gt;very indicative of that effort, and I am happy that everybody will take
&lt;br&gt;the time again to come and exchange views.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; But it didn't work out, mainly because you never could consider &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; yourself producing software under the AL because of your views towards &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;quot;software hoarding&amp;quot;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;No, creating an alternative code base incompatible with almost all the
&lt;br&gt;existing efforts and not considering working together on a shared common
&lt;br&gt;interface to all the components that 30 existing runtimes, class
&lt;br&gt;libraries, jits, compilers, etc. already were using and working on
&lt;br&gt;together was what made the harmony effort fail. I might not like
&lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;software hoarding&amp;quot;, and I certainly prefer using copyleft licenses that
&lt;br&gt;are fairly reciprocal, but being expressly incompatible was what I
&lt;br&gt;objected to. Any license that would be compatible with what the exiting
&lt;br&gt;communities were using would have been OK. Luckily then the FSF did
&lt;br&gt;solve a lot of those issue though by finally upgrading the GPL and
&lt;br&gt;making compatibility an explicit goal. Please do reread &amp;quot;Toward a Free
&lt;br&gt;Java&amp;quot; &lt;a href=&quot;http://lwn.net/Articles/184967/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://lwn.net/Articles/184967/&lt;/a&gt;&amp;nbsp;if you don't get what the history
&lt;br&gt;is here.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; And if you're not providing code, you're providing &amp;quot;air- 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; cover&amp;quot; by letting them point to openjdk as a model open free software &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; community.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It is an open free software community, even though some derivatives are
&lt;br&gt;not fully free software. Something I greatly regret. And you will always
&lt;br&gt;see me being very critical of that and help out any alternative effort
&lt;br&gt;to work around that. And that works. There has never been any attempt to
&lt;br&gt;stifle anybody or any group creating any derivative of the code, whether
&lt;br&gt;it be IcedTea as shipped most GNU/Linux distros now, nor any of the
&lt;br&gt;other hybrid implementations
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.infoq.com/news/2007/06/openjdk-hybrids&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.infoq.com/news/2007/06/openjdk-hybrids&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; So whatever problems you see has historical actually exists, and is &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; still very real and harmful for another group of people with the same
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; interests and aspirations as you, who managed to actually bring an &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; independent implementation together to the point of being ready for &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; compatibility testing.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Sure, I know. We had this back in 2005 already:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://advogato.org/person/robilad/diary/64.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://advogato.org/person/robilad/diary/64.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;And even though Dalibor and Onno pushed for it, we never succeeded back
&lt;br&gt;then with 1.5. Keeping chasing after these old issues instead of
&lt;br&gt;focusing on the future seems not very productive though. There are
&lt;br&gt;indeed still serious issues with non-open specs and anti-social TCK
&lt;br&gt;usage restrictions for 1.6 (I would say the processes around them are
&lt;br&gt;not really workable right now). But we do have free implementations now.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Instead, lets work together on fixing these issues going forward for
&lt;br&gt;1.7, and make sure that we will not just have free code as reference
&lt;br&gt;implementation, but also with a fully free community process we all seem
&lt;br&gt;to want. Either through the JCP if you feel that can still be saved, or
&lt;br&gt;by going around it if it ends up not being able to produce results that
&lt;br&gt;are free for all.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Cheers,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Mark
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21516682</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-17T05:52:57Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-17T05:52:57Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Wielaard</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Hi Geir,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On Sat, 2009-01-17 at 06:40 -0500, Geir Magnusson Jr. wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; On Jan 15, 2009, at 7:11 PM, Mark Wielaard wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; That is a very good point. Thanks for bringing that up. Currently we &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; act
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; as if the JCP has some kind of status that restricts certain kinds of
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; modifications to public APIs.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Yes, the JCP has *exactly* that status - public APIs must comply with &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; the Java SE specification as produced by the expert group, or else the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; software is not Java (or, in deference to Sun's ownership of the Java &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; trademark, &amp;quot;Java compatible&amp;quot;). &amp;nbsp;I think this reliable consistency is &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; one of the great things about Java The Ecosystem (as well as Java the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Platform).
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;Sure, consistency and having unambiguous, strong standards are great for
&lt;br&gt;everybody. No argument there. But if the rules around (producing) those
&lt;br&gt;standards are counter to the spirit of free software then it takes away
&lt;br&gt;from the user instead of adding value. We have to strive for public,
&lt;br&gt;open free specifications with testsuites that are free for everybody to
&lt;br&gt;use to verify any implementation's claim of compatibility with such
&lt;br&gt;standards. I am not convinced the current state of the JCP encourages
&lt;br&gt;that though. If through OpenJDK we can improve the process of producing
&lt;br&gt;specs, the reference implementation and free test suites, then I am all
&lt;br&gt;for it.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; But this has been kind of a problem since
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; access to JSRs and JCKs is not guaranteed to be free of restrictions
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that are incompatible with our way of working in a public and open &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; free software project.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; It turns out that's the least of your problems.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Yes, the biggest problem was getting a full free reference platform for
&lt;br&gt;the Java platform. Although we worked very hard on that through the
&lt;br&gt;various efforts around GNU Classpath and friends, gcj, kaffe, and
&lt;br&gt;finally with harmony, it cannot be denied that Sun's liberation of
&lt;br&gt;almost all of their core platform implementation code base helped
&lt;br&gt;enormously. And doing it in a way that united their effort with almost
&lt;br&gt;all of the existing libre-java community can only be given the highest
&lt;br&gt;praise.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I might be highly critical about some of the processes, the non-open
&lt;br&gt;specs, the TCK being non-free and only available under a NDA forcing
&lt;br&gt;people to work in secret cut of from the rest of the community (but
&lt;br&gt;again high praise for Sun coming up with something that at least lets
&lt;br&gt;people produce Free Software and doesn't get in the way of releasing the
&lt;br&gt;results under the GPL) and the non-transparent trademark rules. But I do
&lt;br&gt;realize that the biggest and most important hurdle has been taken now.
&lt;br&gt;That we are slowly but surely creating a community that produces a fully
&lt;br&gt;free Java platform together, even if some of the steps forward might be
&lt;br&gt;still tricky.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; As you know, the ASF &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; is engaged in what is now a multi-year battle to get the Java SE 5 TCK &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; under terms compatible with being able to distribute the resulting &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; tested binary under an open source license.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Yes, we started that process 12 years ago, and even before we started
&lt;br&gt;Harmony we tried to unite the free java groups and get access to old
&lt;br&gt;TCKs. &lt;a href=&quot;http://lwn.net/Articles/184967/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://lwn.net/Articles/184967/&lt;/a&gt;&amp;nbsp;One of the reasons that I was one
&lt;br&gt;of the Harmony founders, which I and lots of others hoped would be the
&lt;br&gt;ultimate unification of all the java-libre efforts that would not only
&lt;br&gt;bring us a solid, full, free java implementation shared by lots of
&lt;br&gt;groups, but also would give us the political cloud with the JCP
&lt;br&gt;community. We all know how that ended. As I said before I think your
&lt;br&gt;actions were not helpful.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://gnu.wildebeest.org/diary/2007/04/21/openjck/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://gnu.wildebeest.org/diary/2007/04/21/openjck/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I hope we can move past that sad history though and focus on the future.
&lt;br&gt;Now that we have a full free Java compatible platform for Java SE 6 lets
&lt;br&gt;focus on making the processes for getting the same for Java SE 7 and not
&lt;br&gt;just having free code, but also open processes (including open and free
&lt;br&gt;specifications and finally a free TCK!) instead of harping on the past
&lt;br&gt;failures.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Java will never really be free until we get past all of this. &amp;nbsp;Please &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; inform RMS.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You seem hung up on the term Java(TM). Yes, it would be great if we had
&lt;br&gt;a more open, transparent and Free Software compatible way of handling
&lt;br&gt;the trademark issue. But don't confuse naming with code. The code is all
&lt;br&gt;out there, under free software licenses. And even some binaries produced
&lt;br&gt;have been certified as passing the JCK - in a way that is less from
&lt;br&gt;ideal seeing the TCK itself isn't Free Software, but the resulting code
&lt;br&gt;is fully free software. I do talk with RMS from time to time and he
&lt;br&gt;knows my position, goals and the work that still has to be done.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Cheers,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Mark
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21515559</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-17T03:41:27Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-17T03:41:27Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Simon Phipps-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&lt;br&gt;On Jan 16, 2009, at 19:51, Andy Tripp wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Simon Phipps wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Jan 16, 2009, at 19:09, Andy Tripp wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; What has changed so that a constitution is no longer needed?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Who said it wasn't needed?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; I'm deducing that you believe that a constitution is not needed, &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; because
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; the GB is the one who was supposed to create it, it hasn't, and that &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; seems to be OK
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; with you. Do you think it's needed or not?
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;Yes, I think a document on procedures will be needed at some stage. We &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;already have an interim statement that seems OK with the people who &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;have commented and seems to be causing no problems, so pragmatically &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;there doesn't seem to be a gap at present. By the way, I am not &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;setting the agenda for the OGB, I'm a participant like all the others.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; It's just that the only dispute that has arisen so far appears to &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; be this one,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Naturally, no issues are going to &amp;quot;arise&amp;quot; if there's nowhere for &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; them to go.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The OGB exists and has a mailing list, hence this discussion.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Closures are a good example. As you know, there are several &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; proposals and
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; at least one implementation out there. At this point, it looks like &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Neal
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; could probably get BGGA closures into openjdk just by committing the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; code. Could that code then flow into the JDK (without a JSR) or not?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I hope that whatever governance the OpenJDK community finally creates, &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;it will never give the OGB a role of technical judgement. &amp;nbsp;I agree &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;with Andrew that open source steering bodies are there to establish &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;order, not architecture. As David has pointed out, the content of the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;reference implementation is dictated by the spec, not by the work of &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;any code contributor of any affiliation.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;S.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21510138</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T14:55:47Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T14:55:47Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Reinhold</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">The OpenJDK Governance Board (GB) has not met since last April because
&lt;br&gt;Sun has not yet appointed anyone to the two open GB seats. &amp;nbsp;Sun and the
&lt;br&gt;GB considered various candidates early on but then the effort faded into
&lt;br&gt;the background over the summer in the face of more pressing issues.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Without a full GB, there has been no further work on the Constitution.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In the meantime, as others have noted, work is getting done and the
&lt;br&gt;OpenJDK Community is, slowly, expanding.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It is definitely the view of the current GB Members that the GB is, and
&lt;br&gt;ought to be, more of a legislative and judiciary body than an executive.
&lt;br&gt;The GB exists to define the high-level processes by which the Community
&lt;br&gt;operates, and to adjudicate disputes when they arise. &amp;nbsp;It should never,
&lt;br&gt;ever be in the position of making technical decisions. &amp;nbsp;I fully expect
&lt;br&gt;this view to be codified in the Constitution.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;With regard to the JCP, as Doug observed there is not yet a Java SE 7
&lt;br&gt;Platform JSR due to a policy impasse within the Executive Committee.
&lt;br&gt;Sun will submit such a JSR as soon as that issue is resolved. &amp;nbsp;In the
&lt;br&gt;meantime the JDK 7 Project here in the OpenJDK Community will move
&lt;br&gt;forward to prototype some features and enhancements that might -- or
&lt;br&gt;might not -- wind up in the SE 7 Platform Specification.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Some of these improvements will come from outside Sun. &amp;nbsp;Several major
&lt;br&gt;contributions from non-Sun developers are already lined up, and we'll
&lt;br&gt;shortly announce a process by which anyone can propose a new feature.
&lt;br&gt;Stay tuned.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;- Mark
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21506721</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T11:23:59Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T11:23:59Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>David Herron @ Sun</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Andy Tripp wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Simon Phipps wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Jan 16, 2009, at 19:09, Andy Tripp wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;What has changed so that a constitution is no longer needed?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Who said it wasn't needed?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; I'm deducing that you believe that a constitution is not needed, because
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; the GB is the one who was supposed to create it, it hasn't, and that 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; seems to be OK
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; with you. Do you think it's needed or not?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; It's just that the only dispute that has arisen so far appears to be 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; this one, 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Naturally, no issues are going to &amp;quot;arise&amp;quot; if there's nowhere for them 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; to go.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Closures are a good example. As you know, there are several proposals and
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; at least one implementation out there. At this point, it looks like Neal
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; could probably get BGGA closures into openjdk just by committing the 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; code. Could that code then flow into the JDK (without a JSR) or not?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;You said 'JDK' in the last phrase so I suppose you mean the thing we 
&lt;br&gt;label 'JavaSE' and ship through java.sun.com and java.com.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The JCK is derived from JCP specs and tests for conformance. &amp;nbsp;Our 
&lt;br&gt;product named JavaSE (a.k.a. JDK) has to meet the JSR specs and hence is 
&lt;br&gt;run through the JCK just like all other Java implementations. &amp;nbsp;Assuming 
&lt;br&gt;the JCK can successfully reject a compiler that supports an extension 
&lt;br&gt;like closures if closures are not in the spec, then a Java compiler 
&lt;br&gt;could not support that extension and call itself a Java compiler.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Thinking off the top of my head I suppose that such support could be 
&lt;br&gt;turned on by an option and so long as the extension is &amp;quot;off&amp;quot; by default 
&lt;br&gt;it would meet JCP requirements. 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; and experience elsewhere shows that creating governance in a vacuum 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; leads to bad decisions. What actually is the need precipitating your 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; passion, beyond an arbitrary date passing (through, I agree, apparent 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; neglect)?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; I want to know if the JDK is now in the process of forking into
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; a) the JCP-controlled JDK, which at this point looks like it may never 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; have a &amp;quot;7&amp;quot; release
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; b) OpenJDK/IcedTea, self-controlled, with ongoing changes.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;We didn't open source the spec process, we open sourced an 
&lt;br&gt;implementation. &amp;nbsp;The JSR's are the spec and are controlled by the JCP.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I think that questions about opening the spec process need to be brought 
&lt;br&gt;to the JCP. &amp;nbsp;The OpenJDK project is not the best place to pursue opening 
&lt;br&gt;up the spec process.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;For prior Java&amp;lt;n&amp;gt; cycles for values of n less than 7 .. &amp;quot;little changes&amp;quot; 
&lt;br&gt;were rolled into the &amp;quot;Platform JSR&amp;quot; which allows for changes on the size 
&lt;br&gt;of a bug fix or minor feature which aren't significant enough to require 
&lt;br&gt;a JSR. &amp;nbsp;The same would be true for the Java7 cycle assuming we're able 
&lt;br&gt;to settle the issues which currently prevent a Java7 JSR from existing. &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;Hence such ongoing small changes in OpenJDK7 would be rolled into the 
&lt;br&gt;platform JSR I'm assuming will eventually exist.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;- David Herron
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21506085</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T10:51:04Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T10:51:04Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Andy Tripp-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Simon Phipps wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; On Jan 16, 2009, at 19:09, Andy Tripp wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;What has changed so that a constitution is no longer needed?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Who said it wasn't needed?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I'm deducing that you believe that a constitution is not needed, because
&lt;br&gt;the GB is the one who was supposed to create it, it hasn't, and that seems to be OK
&lt;br&gt;with you. Do you think it's needed or not?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; It's just that the only dispute that has 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; arisen so far appears to be this one, 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Naturally, no issues are going to &amp;quot;arise&amp;quot; if there's nowhere for them to go.
&lt;br&gt;Closures are a good example. As you know, there are several proposals and
&lt;br&gt;at least one implementation out there. At this point, it looks like Neal
&lt;br&gt;could probably get BGGA closures into openjdk just by committing the code. 
&lt;br&gt;Could that code then flow into the JDK (without a JSR) or not?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; and experience elsewhere shows 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; that creating governance in a vacuum leads to bad decisions. What 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; actually is the need precipitating your passion, beyond an arbitrary 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; date passing (through, I agree, apparent neglect)?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I want to know if the JDK is now in the process of forking into
&lt;br&gt;a) the JCP-controlled JDK, which at this point looks like it may never have a &amp;quot;7&amp;quot; release
&lt;br&gt;b) OpenJDK/IcedTea, self-controlled, with ongoing changes.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;For me, it's entirely academic, but I'm sure someone like Neal wants to know
&lt;br&gt;where he should put his efforts. And I would think Doug Leah would not be too happy
&lt;br&gt;to hear that all his GB efforts are for nil.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;So again, I ask &amp;quot;what has changed?&amp;quot; Who decided that a GB was needed, wrote up an
&lt;br&gt;OpenJDK charter, established a GB to write a constitution, and has now changed his mind?
&lt;br&gt;Has the entire GB decided not to bother with a constitution? 
&lt;br&gt;Where there discussions? Was there a vote?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I guess I'm just curious.
&lt;br&gt;Andy
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; S.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21506049</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T10:48:57Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T10:48:57Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Neal Gafter</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 10:16 AM, Simon Phipps &lt;span dir=&quot;ltr&quot;&gt;&amp;lt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=21506049&amp;i=0&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;webmink@...&lt;/a&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;/span&gt; wrote:&lt;br&gt;&lt;div class=&quot;gmail_quote&quot;&gt;&lt;blockquote class=&quot;gmail_quote&quot; style=&quot;border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;&quot;&gt;
&lt;div class=&quot;Ih2E3d&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
On Jan 16, 2009, at 19:09, Andy Tripp wrote:&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;blockquote class=&quot;gmail_quote&quot; style=&quot;border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;&quot;&gt;
&amp;nbsp;What has changed so that a constitution is no longer needed?&lt;br&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
Who said it wasn&amp;#39;t needed? It&amp;#39;s just that the only dispute that has arisen so far appears to be this one, and experience elsewhere shows that creating governance in a vacuum leads to bad decisions. What actually is the need precipitating your passion, beyond an arbitrary date passing (through, I agree, apparent neglect)?&lt;font color=&quot;#888888&quot;&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;div&gt;&lt;br&gt;I&amp;#39;m not sure I would characterize this as a dispute or a problem.&amp;nbsp; I&amp;#39;m not upset or
anything, I&amp;#39;m just trying to find out what the processes are for things
moving forward.&amp;nbsp; If people are happy with the current process for changes going into JDK7 before the platform JSR exists (whatever that process is), then that&amp;#39;s OK with me.&lt;br&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21505438</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T10:16:55Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T10:16:55Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Simon Phipps-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&lt;br&gt;On Jan 16, 2009, at 19:09, Andy Tripp wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;What has changed so that a constitution is no longer needed?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Who said it wasn't needed? It's just that the only dispute that has &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;arisen so far appears to be this one, and experience elsewhere shows &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;that creating governance in a vacuum leads to bad decisions. What &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;actually is the need precipitating your passion, beyond an arbitrary &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;date passing (through, I agree, apparent neglect)?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;S.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21505307</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T10:09:19Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T10:09:19Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Andy Tripp-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Simon Phipps wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; On Jan 8, 2009, at 16:47, Andrew Haley wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; So, the less the steering committee does, the better. &amp;nbsp;An active OpenJDK
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; governance board and a &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot;, it hopefully would not have 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; affected
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; our work at all. &amp;nbsp;Their job is to keep out of the way of the people
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; doing real work. &amp;nbsp;They've been doing this quite well.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; I agree. I'm not 100% happy that there have been no meetings, but I do 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; feel that the overall goal we agreed - to make sure that any kind of 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; committee would stay out of the way of the actual work, and that we'd 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; wait until it was clear what the need was until acting - still seems the 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; right one and seems to have been achieved by default. 
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;I thought the overall goal of the GB was to create a constitution, not
&lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;stay out of the way of actual work&amp;quot;. In fact, looking again at the OpenJDK
&lt;br&gt;charter, it's quite clear that that's the purpose of the GB. You say
&lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;we agreed&amp;quot; above, and assuming the &amp;quot;we&amp;quot; is the GB, I don't see any
&lt;br&gt;big discussion in the meeting minutes about &amp;quot;staying out of the way&amp;quot;.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The meeting minutes seem to indicate serious dedication to creating a
&lt;br&gt;constitution. There's no indication there that having no further meetings
&lt;br&gt;and making no progress on a constitution might be a reasonable outcome.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Is there any documentation that the GB ever really agreed that
&lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;we'd wait until it was clear what the need was&amp;quot;? Documented or not,
&lt;br&gt;I'm having a lot of trouble believing that the GB really agreed on this.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; It may well be 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; smart to keep going like this rather than create some document for the 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; sake of having it.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;So you create a GB who's main purposes are to create a constitution and
&lt;br&gt;resolve disputes, and now apparently the thinking is that there's no need for
&lt;br&gt;a constitution, so it's OK that the GB never produced anything? What has changed
&lt;br&gt;so that a constitution is no longer needed? Who exactly is the &amp;quot;we&amp;quot;
&lt;br&gt;that doesn't think a constitution is needed and that no GB meetings are needed?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;And most importantly, doesn't it seem like there's now an issue that requires
&lt;br&gt;the GB and/or a constitution...namely, the issue of who decides what goes
&lt;br&gt;into &amp;quot;the platform&amp;quot; - openJDK or the JCP? Is the JCP dead, and Neal should
&lt;br&gt;just just try to get closures into the openJDK code? Or is the JCP alive,
&lt;br&gt;and will ensure that openJDK code won't leak into JDK without a JSR?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I think it's time the GB either do what it's supposed to do, or officially
&lt;br&gt;disband and let Java drift where it may. It's just silly to have a group
&lt;br&gt;that does nothing and considers that OK because &amp;quot;we&amp;quot; agreed that it should
&lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;stay out of the way&amp;quot;.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Andy
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21503394</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T08:40:55Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T08:40:55Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Simon Phipps-3</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Sorry for the multiple posting, folks, looks like the discuss list &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;rejects mail from me no matter where it comes from :-)&lt;br /&gt; &lt;div class=&quot;small&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/images/icon_attachment.gif&quot; &gt; &lt;strong&gt;smime.p7s&lt;/strong&gt; (3K) &lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/attachment/21503394/0/smime.p7s&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot;&gt;Download Attachment&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21503257</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T08:35:31Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T08:35:31Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Simon Phipps-3</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&lt;br&gt;On Jan 8, 2009, at 16:47, Andrew Haley wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; So, the less the steering committee does, the better. &amp;nbsp;An active &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; OpenJDK
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; governance board and a &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot;, it hopefully would not have &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; affected
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; our work at all. &amp;nbsp;Their job is to keep out of the way of the people
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; doing real work. &amp;nbsp;They've been doing this quite well.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I agree. I'm not 100% happy that there have been no meetings, but I do &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;feel that the overall goal we agreed - to make sure that any kind of &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;committee would stay out of the way of the actual work, and that we'd &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;wait until it was clear what the need was until acting - still seems &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;the right one and seems to have been achieved by default. It may well &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;be smart to keep going like this rather than create some document for &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;the sake of having it.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On Jan 15, 2009, at 19:58, Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The reason I ask is that I'm worried that openJDK may turn into the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; defacto mechanism for features getting into the platform.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;There's already code in the wider OpenJDK community that's &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;experimental or pragmatic and the world hasn't ended (in fact the Java &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;platform is now freely available on Linux) so I'm not sure I &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;understand why this is relevant to an open source community. I'm not &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;aware (correct me if I'm wrong) that Mozilla has governance statements &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;about adherence to W3C process, for example.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;S.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br /&gt; &lt;div class=&quot;small&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/images/icon_attachment.gif&quot; &gt; &lt;strong&gt;smime.p7s&lt;/strong&gt; (3K) &lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/attachment/21503257/0/smime.p7s&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot;&gt;Download Attachment&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21503224</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T08:33:42Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T08:33:42Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Simon Phipps-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&lt;br&gt;On Jan 8, 2009, at 16:47, Andrew Haley wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; So, the less the steering committee does, the better. &amp;nbsp;An active &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; OpenJDK
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; governance board and a &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot;, it hopefully would not have &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; affected
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; our work at all. &amp;nbsp;Their job is to keep out of the way of the people
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; doing real work. &amp;nbsp;They've been doing this quite well.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I agree. I'm not 100% happy that there have been no meetings, but I do &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;feel that the overall goal we agreed - to make sure that any kind of &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;committee would stay out of the way of the actual work, and that we'd &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;wait until it was clear what the need was until acting - still seems &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;the right one and seems to have been achieved by default. It may well &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;be smart to keep going like this rather than create some document for &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;the sake of having it.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On Jan 15, 2009, at 19:58, Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The reason I ask is that I'm worried that openJDK may turn into the &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; defacto mechanism for features getting into the platform.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;There's already code in the wider OpenJDK community that's &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;experimental or pragmatic and the world hasn't ended (in fact the Java &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;platform is now freely available on Linux) so I'm not sure I &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;understand why this is relevant to an open source community. I'm not &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;aware (correct me if I'm wrong) that Mozilla has governance statements &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;about adherence to W3C process, for example.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;S.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21500464</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T06:27:26Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T06:27:26Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Doug Lea</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The reason I ask is that I'm worried that openJDK may turn into the 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; defacto mechanism for features getting into the platform. &amp;nbsp;The JCP used 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; to play that role, but there has been little activity in forming a JSR 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; for Java SE 7 in the past few years. 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;There has been some (sadly unavoidable) lack of transparency
&lt;br&gt;in JCP that has given many people this mis-impression. The
&lt;br&gt;JCP and its Executive Committee (that I am on) very much wants
&lt;br&gt;the JCP to play the central role in driving major releases.
&lt;br&gt;However, it has been stuck for a long while in policy impasses
&lt;br&gt;(such as disputes over terms of TCK tests involving undisclosable
&lt;br&gt;legal matters) that have made it impossible to approve a Java7
&lt;br&gt;Release JSR. Everyone involved hopes that these are resolved soon.
&lt;br&gt;And many of us have invested a fair amount of time trying
&lt;br&gt;to help resolve them.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In the absence of resolution, Java7 plans have been left in a
&lt;br&gt;long gestation mode. Spec leads and contributors (not just
&lt;br&gt;at Sun) involved with changes and additions likely to make it in
&lt;br&gt;to a next major release seem to be proceeding with plans, but
&lt;br&gt;without an identifiable central coordination point. Placing
&lt;br&gt;likely Java7 release contributions in openJDK is a convenient
&lt;br&gt;way to maintain progress in the mean time, and presence
&lt;br&gt;of code in openJDK repositories is one good indication of
&lt;br&gt;some of functionality that some of them intend to include.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;When a Java7 Release JSR can be proposed, it will
&lt;br&gt;probably be able proceed quickly. Until then, the whole
&lt;br&gt;process has an unfortunate shadowy-cabal appearance,
&lt;br&gt;which does indeed suck.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;-Doug
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21499974</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T06:01:32Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T06:01:32Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Volker Simonis</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">What I find most astonishing on this thread is that apparently neither
&lt;br&gt;the Governance Board members nor a Sun representative have considered
&lt;br&gt;it important enough to comment or respond. Strange...
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On 1/16/09, Andrew Haley &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=21499974&amp;i=0&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;aph@...&lt;/a&gt;&amp;gt; wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 19:15 -0800, Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; The OpenJDK governing board, having had its life extended by a
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; year, is now scheduled to dissolve in four months, with two of its
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; non-Sun positions remaining unfilled. &amp;nbsp;The last published meeting
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; minutes were from April 2008, at which it was agreed that the GB
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; would strive for a draft Constitution by the end of 2008.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Who are the seven members of the governing board? &amp;nbsp;Can we please
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; see the minutes of meetings after April, and get a status report
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; on the Constitution?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; The reason I ask is that I'm worried that openJDK may turn into the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; defacto mechanism for features getting into the platform. &amp;nbsp;The JCP
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; used to play that role, but there has been little activity in
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; forming a JSR for Java SE 7 in the past few years. &amp;nbsp;I've noticed
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; that openjdk7 is more and more being called Java 7, JDK7, etc, even
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; though it doesn't implement a platform specification approved by the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; JCP. &amp;nbsp;If openjdk is to become the mechanism by which features are
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; added to the platform,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; I don't see how that can happen. &amp;nbsp;For Java SE 7 to be released there
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;must be a platform specification, and there must be a TCK. &amp;nbsp;openjdk7
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;is a bunch of packages slated for Java SE 7 that may or may not get to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;be in the platform.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;gt; it would be better for the governance model to acknowledge and support that.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; It would, yes, but it would be a huge change.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;In the past there have undoubtedly been developments very much like
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;the openjdk7 tree, where platform integration has proceeded prior to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;the formal platform specification. &amp;nbsp;This is essential: you need to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;make sure that a design works in a reasonable way before its
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;specification is finalized. &amp;nbsp;The only difference now is that the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;openjdk7 tree is open.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp;Andrew.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21495916</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-16T01:24:43Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-16T01:24:43Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Andrew Haley</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 19:15 -0800, Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; The OpenJDK governing board, having had its life extended by a
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; year, is now scheduled to dissolve in four months, with two of its
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; non-Sun positions remaining unfilled. &amp;nbsp;The last published meeting
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; minutes were from April 2008, at which it was agreed that the GB
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; would strive for a draft Constitution by the end of 2008.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Who are the seven members of the governing board? &amp;nbsp;Can we please
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; see the minutes of meetings after April, and get a status report
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; on the Constitution?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The reason I ask is that I'm worried that openJDK may turn into the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; defacto mechanism for features getting into the platform. &amp;nbsp;The JCP
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; used to play that role, but there has been little activity in
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; forming a JSR for Java SE 7 in the past few years. &amp;nbsp;I've noticed
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; that openjdk7 is more and more being called Java 7, JDK7, etc, even
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; though it doesn't implement a platform specification approved by the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; JCP. &amp;nbsp;If openjdk is to become the mechanism by which features are
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; added to the platform,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I don't see how that can happen. &amp;nbsp;For Java SE 7 to be released there
&lt;br&gt;must be a platform specification, and there must be a TCK. &amp;nbsp;openjdk7
&lt;br&gt;is a bunch of packages slated for Java SE 7 that may or may not get to
&lt;br&gt;be in the platform.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; it would be better for the governance model to acknowledge and support that.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It would, yes, but it would be a huge change.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In the past there have undoubtedly been developments very much like
&lt;br&gt;the openjdk7 tree, where platform integration has proceeded prior to
&lt;br&gt;the formal platform specification. &amp;nbsp;This is essential: you need to
&lt;br&gt;make sure that a design works in a reasonable way before its
&lt;br&gt;specification is finalized. &amp;nbsp;The only difference now is that the
&lt;br&gt;openjdk7 tree is open.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Andrew.
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21489960</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-15T16:11:53Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-15T16:11:53Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Wielaard</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Hi Neal,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On Thu, 2009-01-15 at 10:58 -0800, Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The reason I ask is that I'm worried that openJDK may turn into the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; defacto mechanism for features getting into the platform. &amp;nbsp;The JCP
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; used to play that role, but there has been little activity in forming
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; a JSR for Java SE 7 in the past few years. &amp;nbsp;I've noticed that openjdk7
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; is more and more being called Java 7, JDK7, etc, even though it
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; doesn't implement a platform specification approved by the JCP. &amp;nbsp;If
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; openjdk is to become the mechanism by which features are added to the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; platform, it would be better for the governance model to acknowledge
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; and support that.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;That is a very good point. Thanks for bringing that up. Currently we act
&lt;br&gt;as if the JCP has some kind of status that restricts certain kinds of
&lt;br&gt;modifications to public APIs. But this has been kind of a problem since
&lt;br&gt;access to JSRs and JCKs is not guaranteed to be free of restrictions
&lt;br&gt;that are incompatible with our way of working in a public and open free
&lt;br&gt;software project. (See the multiple months long [still unresolved!]
&lt;br&gt;thread on pkg-distro-dev about the inability to use a lot of official
&lt;br&gt;JSR documents for work on OpenJDK.)
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;If we can get a smoother way of working on standards through OpenJDK
&lt;br&gt;that would indeed be very welcome. But does indeed need to come with
&lt;br&gt;some kind of guide lines of how we would like to handle such
&lt;br&gt;responsibilities.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Cheers,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Mark
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21484538</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-15T10:58:14Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-15T10:58:14Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Neal Gafter</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">The reason I ask is that I&amp;#39;m worried that openJDK may turn into the defacto mechanism for features getting into the platform.&amp;nbsp; The JCP used to play that role, but there has been little activity in forming a JSR for Java SE 7 in the past few years.&amp;nbsp; I&amp;#39;ve noticed that openjdk7 is more and more being called Java 7, JDK7, etc, even though it doesn&amp;#39;t implement a platform specification approved by the JCP.&amp;nbsp; If openjdk is to become the mechanism by which features are added to the platform, it would be better for the governance model to acknowledge and support that.&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;div class=&quot;gmail_quote&quot;&gt;On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 6:15 AM, Mark Wielaard &lt;span dir=&quot;ltr&quot;&gt;&amp;lt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=21484538&amp;i=0&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;mark@...&lt;/a&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;/span&gt; wrote:&lt;br&gt;&lt;blockquote class=&quot;gmail_quote&quot; style=&quot;border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;&quot;&gt;
Hi Neal,&lt;br&gt;
&lt;div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div class=&quot;Wj3C7c&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 19:15 -0800, Neal Gafter wrote:&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; The OpenJDK governing board, having had its life extended by a year,&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; is now scheduled to dissolve in four months, with two of its non-Sun&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; positions remaining unfilled. &amp;nbsp;The last published meeting minutes were&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; from April 2008, at which it was agreed that the GB would strive for a&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; draft Constitution by the end of 2008.&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt;&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; Who are the seven members of the governing board? &amp;nbsp;Can we please see&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; the minutes of meetings after April, and get a status report on the&lt;br&gt;
&amp;gt; Constitution?&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;/div&gt;Good questions, and I don&amp;#39;t know the answers.&lt;br&gt;
May I ask a meta-question in return though?&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
What do we really expect from the governance board?&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
While it has been completely missing in action for the last half year, I&lt;br&gt;
cannot say I have actually missed it. Things do seem to happen anyway.&lt;br&gt;
What kind of issues do we as hackers really have that could be solved by&lt;br&gt;
having an active governance board and a &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot;?&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
Cheers,&lt;br&gt;
&lt;font color=&quot;#888888&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
Mark&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;
</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21354423</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-08T07:47:58Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-08T07:47:58Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Andrew Haley</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Mark Wielaard wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 19:15 -0800, Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; The OpenJDK governing board, having had its life extended by a year,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; is now scheduled to dissolve in four months, with two of its non-Sun
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; positions remaining unfilled. &amp;nbsp;The last published meeting minutes were
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; from April 2008, at which it was agreed that the GB would strive for a
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; draft Constitution by the end of 2008.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Who are the seven members of the governing board? &amp;nbsp;Can we please see
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; the minutes of meetings after April, and get a status report on the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Constitution?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Good questions, and I don't know the answers.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; May I ask a meta-question in return though?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; What do we really expect from the governance board?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; While it has been completely missing in action for the last half year, I
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; cannot say I have actually missed it. Things do seem to happen anyway.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; What kind of issues do we as hackers really have that could be solved by
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; having an active governance board and a &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot;?
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;gcc itself is a model. &amp;nbsp;The steering committee only gets involved in
&lt;br&gt;political matters and appoints maintainers. &amp;nbsp;The maintainers control
&lt;br&gt;all the aspects of gcc itself, including features and releases. &amp;nbsp;In
&lt;br&gt;theory the steering committee could resolve deadlocks between
&lt;br&gt;maintainers, but that has AFAIAA never happened. &amp;nbsp;Most gcc maintainers
&lt;br&gt;don't ever have to deal with the steering committee. &amp;nbsp;The steering
&lt;br&gt;committee makes sure that policies to do with freedom and licensing
&lt;br&gt;are followed. &amp;nbsp;It negotiates with the FSF when problems involving
&lt;br&gt;free sofwtare policy arise.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;So, the less the steering committee does, the better. &amp;nbsp;An active OpenJDK
&lt;br&gt;governance board and a &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot;, it hopefully would not have affected
&lt;br&gt;our work at all. &amp;nbsp;Their job is to keep out of the way of the people
&lt;br&gt;doing real work. &amp;nbsp;They've been doing this quite well.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Andrew.
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21352572</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-08T06:15:03Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-08T06:15:03Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Wielaard</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Hi Neal,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 19:15 -0800, Neal Gafter wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The OpenJDK governing board, having had its life extended by a year,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; is now scheduled to dissolve in four months, with two of its non-Sun
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; positions remaining unfilled. &amp;nbsp;The last published meeting minutes were
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; from April 2008, at which it was agreed that the GB would strive for a
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; draft Constitution by the end of 2008.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Who are the seven members of the governing board? &amp;nbsp;Can we please see
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; the minutes of meetings after April, and get a status report on the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Constitution?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Good questions, and I don't know the answers.
&lt;br&gt;May I ask a meta-question in return though?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;What do we really expect from the governance board?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;While it has been completely missing in action for the last half year, I
&lt;br&gt;cannot say I have actually missed it. Things do seem to happen anyway.
&lt;br&gt;What kind of issues do we as hackers really have that could be solved by
&lt;br&gt;having an active governance board and a &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot;?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Cheers,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Mark
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-21345149</id>
	<title>OpenJDK governing board, constitution</title>
	<published>2009-01-07T19:15:01Z</published>
	<updated>2009-01-07T19:15:01Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Neal Gafter</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">The OpenJDK governing board, having had its life extended by a year, is now scheduled to dissolve in four months, with two of its non-Sun positions remaining unfilled.&amp;nbsp; The last published meeting minutes were from April 2008, at which it was agreed that the GB would strive for a draft Constitution by the end of 2008.&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;Who are the seven members of the governing board?&amp;nbsp; Can we please see the minutes of meetings after April, and get a status report on the Constitution?&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;
</content>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://old.nabble.com/OpenJDK-governing-board%2C-constitution-tp21345149p21345149.html" />
</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-19296158</id>
	<title>FREE Online Test at www.yfrindia.com</title>
	<published>2008-09-03T12:20:42Z</published>
	<updated>2008-09-03T12:20:42Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Prize</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.yfrindia.com/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.yfrindia.com/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;Take FREE online TEST, read FREE articles, download FREE presentation, use FREE source code, useful links, competition updates, free ONLINE TEST TESTS,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.yfrindia.com/resources/Tests&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.yfrindia.com/resources/Tests&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;free APTITUDE TEST, English Test, Computer Test, Mechanical Test, Electronics Test, Electrical Test, GATE preparation, CAT preparation, Job preparation, resume.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.yfrindia.com/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.yfrindia.com/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17555953</id>
	<title>Re: Governance board status?</title>
	<published>2008-05-30T03:33:10Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-30T03:33:10Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Dalibor Topic</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Roman Kennke wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Hi Andy,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; What's going on with the OpenJDK Interum Governance Board?
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Until the OpenJDK has a constitution, things aren't really open, and
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Sun continues to control everything.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;etcetc&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; I don't know about the constitution. But apart from that, there has been
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; a lot of progress on the technical side. OpenJDK now has live Mercurial
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; repositories, a lot of new active outside developers, both companies
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; (Red Hat, aicas) as well as individuals. There's a special TCK license
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; for OpenJDK. Sun has become reasonable open and responsive wrt to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; patches and mailing list postings. I think they are doing pretty good,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; considering that they are all horribly busy. I've been a strong critic
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; of the closedness of OpenJDK in the past, but I think I can honestly say
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; that OpenJDK is on a good way, not by observing one single mailing list
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; and detail of the progress, but by actively contributing and taking part
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; of the whole thing. IMO the constitution is only a beaurocratic little
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; detail and I'm sure it will be fixed, when needed.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;Thanks, Roman, that's spot on.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I posted a longer set on my thoughts about the Interim GB 2.0 on my blog on
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://robilad.livejournal.com/31357.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://robilad.livejournal.com/31357.html&lt;/a&gt;&amp;nbsp;why the focus of the project 
&lt;br&gt;shifted
&lt;br&gt;over the past year to providing code and infra first, and constitutions 
&lt;br&gt;later
&lt;br&gt;(i.e. later this year, not later forever).
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;cheers,
&lt;br&gt;dalibor topic
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17541393</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK GB Minutes for 2008/04/10 posted</title>
	<published>2008-05-29T10:04:33Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-29T10:04:33Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Dalibor Topic-5</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Andrew Haley wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Dalibor Topic wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; The minutes of the fifth OpenJDK GB meeting have been posted to the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; gb-discuss list [1] and to the web [2].
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Please direct comments and questions to the gb-discuss list. &amp;nbsp;You'll need
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; to subscribe first if you haven't already; messages from non-subscribers
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; are discarded in order to avoid spam.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 10 April ? &amp;nbsp;And only now you produce the minutes? &amp;nbsp;Not good at all &amp;nbsp;:-(
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;/div&gt;Indeed. My bad, really.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I had the minutes ready for a while, but couldn't sync up with Mark
&lt;br&gt;on the publication during JavaOne, as I had been drinking from the 
&lt;br&gt;firehose there
&lt;br&gt;in my first couple of weeks. After JavaOne, there was the regular post 
&lt;br&gt;JavaOne lull,
&lt;br&gt;people taking vacations, systems being maintained, travel to UDS on my 
&lt;br&gt;side, that
&lt;br&gt;we finally synced up today, to make sure that when I publish the 
&lt;br&gt;minutes, they also
&lt;br&gt;show up on the web site.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Yeah, J1 produces a massive amount of time wave shifts inside Sun. I 
&lt;br&gt;don't like it either,
&lt;br&gt;and I doubt anyone on Sun's side does. Having been on the other side for 
&lt;br&gt;a couple of
&lt;br&gt;weeks, I can understand that people like to take a week or two off 
&lt;br&gt;afterwards, though,
&lt;br&gt;as putting on the show, while at the same time keeping everything else 
&lt;br&gt;running is a
&lt;br&gt;huge pile of work.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;cheers,
&lt;br&gt;dalibor topic
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;-- 
&lt;br&gt;*******************************************************************
&lt;br&gt;Dalibor Topic
&lt;br&gt;Java F/OSS Ambassador &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &lt;a href=&quot;http://openjdk.java.net&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://openjdk.java.net&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;Sun Microsystems GmbH &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; mailto:&lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=17541393&amp;i=0&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Dalibor.Topic@...&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;br&gt;Nagelsweg 55 &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;D-20097 Hamburg &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Sitz der Gesellschaft: Sonnenallee 1, D-85551 Kirchheim-Heimstetten
&lt;br&gt;Amtsgericht München: HRB 161028
&lt;br&gt;Geschäftsführer: Thomas Schröder, Wolfgang Engels, Dr. Roland Bömer
&lt;br&gt;Vorsitzender des Aufsichtsrates: Martin Häring
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17540763</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK Charter amended</title>
	<published>2008-05-29T09:50:03Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-29T09:50:03Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Reinhold</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&amp;gt; Date: Thu, 29 May 2008 09:42:06 -0700
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; From: &lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=17540763&amp;i=0&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;xiomara.jayasena@...&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Mark Reinhold wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; As proposed in the recently-posted GB minutes [1] the OpenJDK Charter
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; was amended by Sun on 7 May 2008 so as to extend the term of the initial
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Interim Governance Board by one year and to expand the GB from five to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; seven Members, with four from outside Sun and three from within.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; For further commentary please see [2] and [3].
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; - Mark
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; [1] &lt;a href=&quot;http://openjdk.java.net/groups/gb/2008-04-10.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://openjdk.java.net/groups/gb/2008-04-10.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; [2] &lt;a href=&quot;http://blogs.sun.com/mr/openjdk_charter_amendment&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://blogs.sun.com/mr/openjdk_charter_amendment&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Link [2] does not work for me ;-( the others do.
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;Sigh. &amp;nbsp;What I meant was:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &lt;a href=&quot;http://blogs.sun.com/mr/entry/openjdk_charter_amendment&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://blogs.sun.com/mr/entry/openjdk_charter_amendment&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Thanks for pointing this out.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;- Mark
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17540737</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK GB Minutes for 2008/04/10 posted</title>
	<published>2008-05-29T09:46:14Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-29T09:46:14Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Andrew Haley</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Dalibor Topic wrote:
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The minutes of the fifth OpenJDK GB meeting have been posted to the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; gb-discuss list [1] and to the web [2].
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Please direct comments and questions to the gb-discuss list. &amp;nbsp;You'll need
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; to subscribe first if you haven't already; messages from non-subscribers
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; are discarded in order to avoid spam.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;10 April ? &amp;nbsp;And only now you produce the minutes? &amp;nbsp;Not good at all &amp;nbsp;:-(
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Andrew.
&lt;br&gt;</content>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://old.nabble.com/Re%3A-OpenJDK-GB-Minutes-for-2008-04-10-posted-tp17540737p17540737.html" />
</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17540729</id>
	<title>Re: OpenJDK Charter amended</title>
	<published>2008-05-29T09:42:06Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-29T09:42:06Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>xiomara.jayasena</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&lt;br&gt;Hi Mark,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Mark Reinhold wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; As proposed in the recently-posted GB minutes [1] the OpenJDK Charter
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; was amended by Sun on 7 May 2008 so as to extend the term of the initial
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Interim Governance Board by one year and to expand the GB from five to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; seven Members, with four from outside Sun and three from within.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; For further commentary please see [2] and [3].
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; - Mark
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; [1] &lt;a href=&quot;http://openjdk.java.net/groups/gb/2008-04-10.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://openjdk.java.net/groups/gb/2008-04-10.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; [2] &lt;a href=&quot;http://blogs.sun.com/mr/openjdk_charter_amendment&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://blogs.sun.com/mr/openjdk_charter_amendment&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;Link [2] does not work for me ;-( the others do.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;-Xiomara
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; [3] &lt;a href=&quot;http://robilad.livejournal.com/31357.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://robilad.livejournal.com/31357.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;nbsp; 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17540309</id>
	<title>OpenJDK GB Minutes: 2008/04/10</title>
	<published>2008-05-29T09:31:02Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-29T09:31:02Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Dalibor Topic-5</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Attached please find the minutes of the fifth meeting of the Governance
&lt;br&gt;Board. &amp;nbsp;The minutes are also available on the web:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;&lt;a href=&quot;http://openjdk.java.net/groups/gb/2008-04-10.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://openjdk.java.net/groups/gb/2008-04-10.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Respectfully submitted,
&lt;br&gt;- Dalibor Topic
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;-- 
&lt;br&gt;*******************************************************************
&lt;br&gt;Dalibor Topic
&lt;br&gt;Java F/OSS Ambassador &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &lt;a href=&quot;http://openjdk.java.net&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://openjdk.java.net&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;Sun Microsystems GmbH &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; mailto:&lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=17540309&amp;i=0&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Dalibor.Topic@...&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;br&gt;Nagelsweg 55 &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;D-20097 Hamburg &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Sitz der Gesellschaft: Sonnenallee 1, D-85551 Kirchheim-Heimstetten
&lt;br&gt;Amtsgericht München: HRB 161028
&lt;br&gt;Geschäftsführer: Thomas Schröder, Wolfgang Engels, Dr. Roland Bömer
&lt;br&gt;Vorsitzender des Aufsichtsrates: Martin Häring
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br /&gt;OpenJDK GB Minutes: 2008/4/10
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The fifth meeting of the OpenJDK Governance Board took place via conference
&lt;br&gt;call on Thursday, 10 April 2008 at 16:00 UTC, with the following agenda:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;1 Dalibor's change of status
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;2 Charter renewal
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;3 Building community before formalizing governance
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;All GB members were present: Doug Lea, Fabiane Nardon, Dalibor Topic, Simon
&lt;br&gt;Phipps, and Mark Reinhold.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The intent of these minutes is to capture the conversational flow of the GB's
&lt;br&gt;discussion and also to record agreed-upon resolutions. &amp;nbsp;If you are interested
&lt;br&gt;only in the latter then search for the word AGREED throughout the text.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;1 Dalibor's change of status
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Dalibor had announced on his blog [1] that he would start working for Sun
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Microsystems on 15 April 2008. &amp;nbsp;Mark presented three different options for
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;dealing with that change of status:
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;A: Dalibor steps down, Simon steps down, Sun appoints Dalibor as
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; the second Sun member of the Interim Governance Board, and then
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Sun appoints someone else from outside Sun to fill Dalibor's
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; current seat.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Advantage would be that this option looks good from a community perspective,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;and is consistent with what the GB has discussed before in terms of having
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;the Constitution require that no one organization hold a majority of the GB
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;seats.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Disadvantage would be losing Simon's expertise in the process of drafting a
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Constitution.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;B: Since the charter of the Interim GB does not actually require that the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Community seats not be held by Sun employees, and Sun employees
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; are Members of the OpenJDK Community, then we can
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; retain the status quo, i.e., both Dalibor and Simon stay.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;This option was discussed on the #openjdk IRC channel on Tuesday, 8 April
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;2008.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Advantage would be keeping Simon on board.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Disadvantage would be a Sun majority on the Interim GB.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;C: Sun expands the Interim GB by at least one seat, if not two,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; and Sun fills them with people who are not Sun employees.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;This option was suggested by Simon to Mark on Wednesday, 9 April 2008.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Advantage would be broadening the Community representation on the GB, while
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;also allowing Simon to stay on.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Disadvantage would be a larger GB, which would make consensus harder to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;achieve.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Fabiane wanted Simon to stay on board, and preferred option C. &amp;nbsp;Doug
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;preferred whatever option would cause this Interim GB to be dissolved first,
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;so increasing the number of people who can produce rather than guide or
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;critique documents and constitutions and rules would be really wonderful.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Dalibor suggested that for him stepping down would be the easiest option, but
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;it would burden the GB with having to find a replacement for the brief
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;interim period before being rechartered at JavaOne under option C. &amp;nbsp;Doug
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;suggested that with Dalibor working at Sun, now there is somebody new who can
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;put some energy and attention to the work on the Constitution, which requires
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;access to Sun's legal and other resources. &amp;nbsp;Dalibor was happy to include the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;GB work in his duties, and favored option C. &amp;nbsp;Doug agreed. &amp;nbsp;Simon suggested
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;to go with option C, expanding the GB by two members, based on his experience
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;with OpenSolaris, with three members from Sun, and four members outside Sun.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Mark's favored option was C as well, expanding the board to seven members.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;2 Charter renewal
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;After the above discussion the GB unanimously
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;AGREED: To request Sun Microsystems to amend the OpenJDK Charter to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;expand the number of GB members to seven, with three members
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;employed by Sun and four members from outside Sun.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;The GB then discussed potential candidates for the two additional seats, and
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;AGREED: To let Doug and Mark contact potential candidates.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;The GB then discussed the role Dalibor should play until the GB is
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;rechartered, and
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;AGREED: To ask Dalibor to publicly state that he will continue to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;participate, but abstain from voting until the GB is rechartered.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;3 Building community before formalizing governance
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;The GB then went on to discuss the schedule for the Constitution. &amp;nbsp;Mark
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;pointed out that the initial schedule was optimistic; due to changes in Sun's
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;priorities over the past year the work on the Constitution is running behind
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;the schedule and won't be finished by JavaOne, as originally planned. &amp;nbsp;In
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;conversations over the past few months with Dalibor, Simon, and others, Mark
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;had concluded that building the Community and the infrastructure for
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;collaboration was much more important than formalizing governance, and
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;prioritized his work accordingly.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Dalibor pointed out that currently the Community is for the largest part made
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;up of Sun employees, and he'd prefer to see it grow to include significant
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Membership from outside Sun. &amp;nbsp;Once a Constitution is ratified it will likely
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;take a significant effort by new Community Members to amend it, so it would
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;be better to grow the Community first than to rush to draft a Constitution
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;that would ultimately end up being very tailored to what Sun wants.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Fabiane agreed that the Community as a whole has been more concerned about
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;infrastructure and participation than about the Constitution, and suggested
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;that the project should strive to increase non-Sun participation in all areas
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;in order to be able to have a Constitution that makes sense for everyone.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Mark agreed, and pointed out that a rushed Constitution would likely undergo
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;fairly heavy revision as the Community grew. &amp;nbsp;Doug pointed out that not doing
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;things out of fear of doing them wrong was a bad idea. &amp;nbsp;He instead suggested
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;that if the GB wants want a thoughtful, high-quality, but not permanent and
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;not oriented towards perfection Constitution out there by the end of the
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;year, and driving that would be part of Dalibor's tasks at Sun, that would be
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;a great reason to adjust the schedule. &amp;nbsp;Dalibor agreed, and the GB went on to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;discuss the schedule for further infrastructure improvements, and how that
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;affected the schedule for a Constitution draft.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Simon proposed to have the Community reaffirm the Interim GB and the interim
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;governance rules with the modification to increase the number of GB members
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;to seven, for another 18 months. &amp;nbsp;Doug liked the idea. &amp;nbsp;Mark objected, noting
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;that running a plenary vote in the couple of weeks before JavaOne would be
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;logistically challenging since most of the Members work at Sun. &amp;nbsp;Dalibor
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;agreed, and Fabiane pointed out that, realistically, nothing is going to
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;happen until after JavaOne.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;Mark observed that the majority of Community Members working at Sun would be
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;on vacation in the weeks after JavaOne, so early June/July would be the best
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;time to start with regular calls and the discussion of drafts. &amp;nbsp;Dalibor
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;committed to writing up remaining minutes, and Mark was happy to delegate
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;that task.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;With that, the GB
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;AGREED: To strive for a draft Constitution by the end of the year; and
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;AGREED: To ask Dalibor to prepare the minutes of this meeting, and of
&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;the October meeting, as soon as possible.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;At this point the GB adjourned.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;[1] &lt;a href=&quot;http://robilad.livejournal.com/30463.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://robilad.livejournal.com/30463.html&lt;/a&gt;&amp;nbsp;
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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</entry>

<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17495949</id>
	<title>Re: Governance board status?</title>
	<published>2008-05-27T10:35:39Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-27T10:35:39Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Roman Kennke-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Hi Andy,
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; What's going on with the OpenJDK Interum Governance Board?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Until the OpenJDK has a constitution, things aren't really open, and
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Sun continues to control everything.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;lt;etcetc&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I don't know about the constitution. But apart from that, there has been
&lt;br&gt;a lot of progress on the technical side. OpenJDK now has live Mercurial
&lt;br&gt;repositories, a lot of new active outside developers, both companies
&lt;br&gt;(Red Hat, aicas) as well as individuals. There's a special TCK license
&lt;br&gt;for OpenJDK. Sun has become reasonable open and responsive wrt to
&lt;br&gt;patches and mailing list postings. I think they are doing pretty good,
&lt;br&gt;considering that they are all horribly busy. I've been a strong critic
&lt;br&gt;of the closedness of OpenJDK in the past, but I think I can honestly say
&lt;br&gt;that OpenJDK is on a good way, not by observing one single mailing list
&lt;br&gt;and detail of the progress, but by actively contributing and taking part
&lt;br&gt;of the whole thing. IMO the constitution is only a beaurocratic little
&lt;br&gt;detail and I'm sure it will be fixed, when needed.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Cheers, Roman
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;-- 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://kennke.org/blog/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://kennke.org/blog/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br /&gt; &lt;div class=&quot;small&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/images/icon_attachment.gif&quot; &gt; &lt;strong&gt;signature.asc&lt;/strong&gt; (196 bytes) &lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/attachment/17495949/0/signature.asc&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot;&gt;Download Attachment&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-17494857</id>
	<title>Governance board status?</title>
	<published>2008-05-27T09:41:29Z</published>
	<updated>2008-05-27T09:41:29Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Andy Tripp-2</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">What's going on with the OpenJDK Interum Governance Board?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;There hasn't been any email on this list in the last four months: 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/gb-discuss/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/gb-discuss/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I had heard (&lt;a href=&quot;http://fitzsim.org/blog/&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://fitzsim.org/blog/&lt;/a&gt;)
&lt;br&gt;that the OpenJDK constitution, which was supposed to
&lt;br&gt;be ready by JavaOne2008, has been delayed a year, and that the
&lt;br&gt;Interum GB now has two additional people. Are these true? If so,
&lt;br&gt;why no posting about it on this list?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;A search for &amp;quot;constitution&amp;quot; on the JavaOne2008 site returns nothing.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Until the OpenJDK has a constitution, things aren't really open, and
&lt;br&gt;Sun continues to control everything. For example, without any rules
&lt;br&gt;in place on the GB, Sun has changed the makeup of the GB and could 
&lt;br&gt;continue to do so.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I thought that the initial time frame for a constitution (9 months?)
&lt;br&gt;was too long. Now, the deadline has passed, there seems to be zero progress
&lt;br&gt;on it, and a whole extra year is added to the deadline? That's an
&lt;br&gt;awful way to start a community. Constitutions for whole new countries
&lt;br&gt;have been created and ratified in less time than this.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Perhaps the whole IGB thing needs to be re-evaluated, since the main purpose
&lt;br&gt;of it is to produce a constitution, and zero progress seems 
&lt;br&gt;(at least from the outside looking in) to have been
&lt;br&gt;made after nearly a year. 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I know everyone's busy, but so far it seems like this whole GB, constitution,
&lt;br&gt;etc. is just a sham.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Your friendly neighborhood thorn-in-your-side,
&lt;br&gt;Andy Tripp
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-15035188</id>
	<title>Re: Delayed sponsorship vote on the JDK 6 Project Proposal</title>
	<published>2008-01-22T21:25:29Z</published>
	<updated>2008-01-22T21:25:29Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Mark Reinhold</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">&amp;gt; From: Mark Reinhold &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=15035188&amp;i=0&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;mr@...&lt;/a&gt;&amp;gt;
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; To: &lt;a href=&quot;http://old.nabble.com/user/SendEmail.jtp?type=post&amp;post=15035188&amp;i=1&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;gb-discuss@...&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; ...
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Rather than ask Joe to resubmit the JDK 6 Project Proposal, I hereby
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; request the Interim Governance Board to recognize the Build Group's
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; sponsorship vote as valid despite its tardiness.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; GB members: Please indicate your agreement (or not) in replies to this
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; message.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Thank you for your prompt votes.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I also vote: yes.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;For the record, the GB has now voted unanimously in favor of recognizing
&lt;br&gt;the Build Group's delayed sponsorship vote of the JDK 6 Project.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;- Mark
&lt;br&gt;</content>
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<entry>
	<id>tag:old.nabble.com,2006:post-14900389</id>
	<title>Re: Delayed sponsorship vote on the JDK 6 Project Proposal</title>
	<published>2008-01-16T16:14:25Z</published>
	<updated>2008-01-16T16:14:25Z</updated>
	<author>
		<name>Dalibor Topic</name>
	</author>
	<content type="html">Mark Reinhold wrote:
&lt;div class='shrinkable-quote'&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Joe Darcy proposed the JDK 6 Project on 14 December [1].
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Kelly O'Hair called for the Build Group to vote on sponsoring this
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Project on 7 January [2], and in due course that vote passed [3].
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; The interim governance rules [4] require that a Group vote to sponsor
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; a proposed Project within 14 days, so strictly speaking this vote was
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; invalid. &amp;nbsp;(I'm sure this was an innocent mistake on Kelly's part, most
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; likely related to Sun's week-long break over the holidays.)
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; Rather than ask Joe to resubmit the JDK 6 Project Proposal, I hereby
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; request the Interim Governance Board to recognize the Build Group's
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; sponsorship vote as valid despite its tardiness.
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; GB members: Please indicate your agreement (or not) in replies to this
&lt;br&gt;&amp;gt; message.
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;br&gt;I agree with recognizing the vote.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Rationale: No build group Member challenged the validity of the vote. It 
&lt;br&gt;passed without No votes by Members. So I think it's unlikely that a 
&lt;br&gt;re-vote would result in a different outcome, from the one already 
&lt;br&gt;expressed by its Members, in particular since the discussion of the vote 
&lt;br&gt;on the build-dev list gives no indication of disagreement between Members.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;A potential voice of disagreement was Erik Trimble post [1], but he 
&lt;br&gt;seems to be asking whether he can vote NO. Per the interim rules, as he 
&lt;br&gt;is not listed among the build group's members[2], he can not vote 
&lt;br&gt;without the group voting him in as a member first.
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;As an item of process curiosity, though: You are a member of the build 
&lt;br&gt;group, and haven't cast a vote, so you could try to argue that your vote 
&lt;br&gt;window still extends until the end of the two week period started by 
&lt;br&gt;Kelly's call for votes on the 7th. ;)
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I think we can agree that a vote can be counted out by a groups's 
&lt;br&gt;moderator before all members have voted, provided that the majority is 
&lt;br&gt;irreversibly reached for or against the issue being voted on, as it was 
&lt;br&gt;in this case. That would prevent decisions from being delayed due to 
&lt;br&gt;Members whose votes couldn't influence a decision any more being absent 
&lt;br&gt;from the vote. Does that make sense to others?
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;[1] 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/build-dev/2008-January/000663.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/build-dev/2008-January/000663.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;[2] 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/build-dev/2008-January/000659.html&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/build-dev/2008-January/000659.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;</content>
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