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viernes, 20 de julio de 2012

Development by Davis: “Like an open book: Your 2012 summer reading” plus 5 more

Development by Davis: “Like an open book: Your 2012 summer reading” plus 5 more


Like an open book: Your 2012 summer reading

Posted: 20 Jul 2012 04:00 AM PDT

Your 2012 open source summer reading

Summer has settled firmly upon opensource.com headquarters in Raleigh—just as it has throughout the rest of the United States—but our team has successfully avoided the scorching, 100-degree heat by spending time with some truely refreshing ideas.

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Linux t-shirt design contest winner inspired by Mom

Posted: 20 Jul 2012 02:00 AM PDT

Linux.com t-shirt finalists

Ladies and gentlemen, the wait is over! Brian Beck has been named the 2012 Linux Foundation T-shirt Design winner.

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AMD Reports Second Quarter Results

Posted: 19 Jul 2012 12:00 AM PDT

AMD (NYSE:AMD) today announced revenue for the second quarter of 2012 of $1.41 billion, net income of $37 million, or $0.05 per share, and operating income of $77 million. The company reported non-GAAP net income of $46 million, or $0.06 per share, and non-GAAP ope...


Meet the team that is collaborating on open source projects at the MS Open Tech Hub

Posted: 19 Jul 2012 09:00 AM PDT

From Jean Paoli

Since we launched Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. (MS Open Tech) as a subsidiary, project ideas have poured into our team from inside and outside the company as we shipped many open source projects and participated in many open standards activities.

After a few months of existence I want to provide you some insights on how we are functioning internally: we are working on many projects and are hiring ten full time employees: we are hiring developers, technical program managers, standards professionals and  technical evangelists! We will be posting the jobs descriptions in a few weeks (and will update this blog with a link to apply).

We have also been thinking about how to scale in order to be able to work across the many projects that could be interesting to MS Open Tech, Microsoft, and to the industry as a whole.

I am pleased today to introduce the MS Open Tech Hub (the Hub):

We created the Hub as new engineering program for MS Open Tech engineers: It is a collaborative place to build open source projects, exchange and evolve open source engineering best practices, and marshal and temporarily assign resources from Microsoft to MS Open Tech (in addition to MS Open Tech full time employees) based on the needs of specific projects.

Open_Tech_group_High-2

As the photograph above shows, the entire MS Open Tech team is excited and energized around the announcement of the Hub.

The number one goal of the Hub is to build, accept contributions or contribute to open source projects. Based on the needs of open source projects, engineering resources from Microsoft teams may be temporarily assigned to MS Open Tech to participate in the Hub, where they will collaborate with the community, work with the MS Open Tech full time employees and contribute to MS Open Tech projects. This collaboration will further help us exchange and evolve open source engineering best practices for open source.

The goal of the MS Open Tech Hub is to create a pool of talent where developers, testers, architects and others push boundaries, explore the toughest questions, and advance our investment in openness. The Hub brings together some of our best and brightest engineers to join together, work with the open community and toward the ultimate goal – building, accepting and contributing to interoperability, standards and open source projects.

For example, the Entity Framework team joined the MS Open Tech Hub, and brought today's open source Entity Framework project to life. This team was able to quickly organize engineering and open development resources to be ready to start collaborating with the open source communities. EF will join the other open source components of Microsoft's dev tools and frameworks – MVC, Web API, and Web Pages with Razor Syntax – to help increase development transparency for this project.

Get to know our team and find out what they like about collaborating in the Hub.

We've learned through the years that great ideas happen when smart, passionate and creative people come together in a collaborative environment that enables new ideas to flourish.

A few photos of a typical day in the MS Open Tech Hub

clip_image002

clip_image004

clip_image006

clip_image008

clip_image010

Jean Paoli
President
Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc.
A subsidiary of Microsoft Corporation


Meet the team that is collaborating on open source projects at the MS Open Tech Hub

Posted: 19 Jul 2012 09:00 AM PDT

From Jean Paoli

Since we launched Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. (MS Open Tech) as a subsidiary, project ideas have poured into our team from inside and outside the company as we shipped many open source projects and participated in many open standards activities.

After a few months of existence I want to provide you some insights on how we are functioning internally: we are working on many projects and are hiring ten full time employees: we are hiring developers, technical program managers, standards professionals and  technical evangelists! We will be posting the jobs descriptions in a few weeks (and will update this blog with a link to apply).

We have also been thinking about how to scale in order to be able to work across the many projects that could be interesting to MS Open Tech, Microsoft, and to the industry as a whole.

I am pleased today to introduce the MS Open Tech Hub (the Hub):

We created the Hub as new engineering program for MS Open Tech engineers: It is a collaborative place to build open source projects, exchange and evolve open source engineering best practices, and marshal and temporarily assign resources from Microsoft to MS Open Tech (in addition to MS Open Tech full time employees) based on the needs of specific projects.

Open_Tech_group_High-2

As the photograph above shows, the entire MS Open Tech team is excited and energized around the announcement of the Hub.

The number one goal of the Hub is to build, accept contributions or contribute to open source projects. Based on the needs of open source projects, engineering resources from Microsoft teams may be temporarily assigned to MS Open Tech to participate in the Hub, where they will collaborate with the community, work with the MS Open Tech full time employees and contribute to MS Open Tech projects. This collaboration will further help us exchange and evolve open source engineering best practices for open source.

The goal of the MS Open Tech Hub is to create a pool of talent where developers, testers, architects and others push boundaries, explore the toughest questions, and advance our investment in openness. The Hub brings together some of our best and brightest engineers to join together, work with the open community and toward the ultimate goal – building, accepting and contributing to interoperability, standards and open source projects.

For example, the Entity Framework team joined the MS Open Tech Hub, and brought today's open source Entity Framework project to life. This team was able to quickly organize engineering and open development resources to be ready to start collaborating with the open source communities. EF will join the other open source components of Microsoft's dev tools and frameworks – MVC, Web API, and Web Pages with Razor Syntax – to help increase development transparency for this project.

Get to know our team and find out what they like about collaborating in the Hub.

We've learned through the years that great ideas happen when smart, passionate and creative people come together in a collaborative environment that enables new ideas to flourish.

A few photos of a typical day in the MS Open Tech Hub

clip_image002

clip_image004

clip_image006

clip_image008

clip_image010

Jean Paoli
President
Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc.
A subsidiary of Microsoft Corporation


Meet the team that is collaborating on open source projects at the MS Open Tech Hub

Posted: 19 Jul 2012 09:00 AM PDT

From Jean Paoli

Since we launched Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. (MS Open Tech) as a subsidiary, project ideas have poured into our team from inside and outside the company as we shipped many open source projects and participated in many open standards activities.

After a few months of existence I want to provide you some insights on how we are functioning internally: we are working on many projects and are hiring ten full time employees: we are hiring developers, technical program managers, standards professionals and  technical evangelists! We will be posting the jobs descriptions in a few weeks (and will update this blog with a link to apply).

We have also been thinking about how to scale in order to be able to work across the many projects that could be interesting to MS Open Tech, Microsoft, and to the industry as a whole.

I am pleased today to introduce the MS Open Tech Hub (the Hub):

We created the Hub as new engineering program for MS Open Tech engineers: It is a collaborative place to build open source projects, exchange and evolve open source engineering best practices, and marshal and temporarily assign resources from Microsoft to MS Open Tech (in addition to MS Open Tech full time employees) based on the needs of specific projects.

Open_Tech_group_High-2

As the photograph above shows, the entire MS Open Tech team is excited and energized around the announcement of the Hub.

The number one goal of the Hub is to build, accept contributions or contribute to open source projects. Based on the needs of open source projects, engineering resources from Microsoft teams may be temporarily assigned to MS Open Tech to participate in the Hub, where they will collaborate with the community, work with the MS Open Tech full time employees and contribute to MS Open Tech projects. This collaboration will further help us exchange and evolve open source engineering best practices for open source.

The goal of the MS Open Tech Hub is to create a pool of talent where developers, testers, architects and others push boundaries, explore the toughest questions, and advance our investment in openness. The Hub brings together some of our best and brightest engineers to join together, work with the open community and toward the ultimate goal – building, accepting and contributing to interoperability, standards and open source projects.

For example, the Entity Framework team joined the MS Open Tech Hub, and brought today's open source Entity Framework project to life. This team was able to quickly organize engineering and open development resources to be ready to start collaborating with the open source communities. EF will join the other open source components of Microsoft's dev tools and frameworks – MVC, Web API, and Web Pages with Razor Syntax – to help increase development transparency for this project.

Get to know our team and find out what they like about collaborating in the Hub.

We've learned through the years that great ideas happen when smart, passionate and creative people come together in a collaborative environment that enables new ideas to flourish.

A few photos of a typical day in the MS Open Tech Hub

clip_image002

clip_image004

clip_image006

clip_image008

clip_image010

Jean Paoli
President
Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc.
A subsidiary of Microsoft Corporation


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