what and why - oVirt positioning

There was a short and lively discussion on the phone today about why we are building an open virtualization community from the ground up. For example, people are being asked why we aren't putting this energy in to joining existing open-virt efforts. The problem with the latter discussion is it too easily gets in to comparing fresh oranges with dried bananas - that is, it appears to be a common discussion domain (fruit!), but the form, function, and contents are very different. In the end, if you are going to talk about fresh oranges, it doesn't make sense to bring up dried bananas. Bringing this discussion to the mailing list, this gives us a chance to work out our ideas in an open forum (that is, these archives will eventually be open to the public.) Thus a consensus here about why to do this project proves the point that this is an open leadership community from the outset. One theme that came up today I paraphrase here: We have very specific ideas about how to do things the open source way, learned from places such as Apache and Eclipse: * Involve key stakeholders from the beginning; * Require them to put a real stake down to be first-movers; * Make the community from the very outset openly constructed for shared control and management; * Show how to earn a seat at the board table; * Design and build leadership so consensus rolls up and down from sub-projects to a central governance body; * The community sets the project's direction by consensus from the outset. ... then condensing it: The only way to ensure a community is open and moving in the correct direction is to do it right from the start. There's no mistake in starting a new effort to accomplish those goals. ... another version: We're building an open virtualization project from the ground-up, involving key stakeholders as a start, and aggressively focusing on an open governance and project model. As we proceed, if our technology and community-style fit with all these other virtualization and cloud efforts, then integration will go more smoothly. Those are some ideas to start off. Why do *you* think we are doing the oVirt Project? - Karsten -- name: Karsten 'quaid' Wade, Sr. Community Gardener team: Red Hat Community Architecture & Leadership uri: http://communityleadershipteam.org http://TheOpenSourceWay.org gpg: AD0E0C41

Hi Karsten, I believe there are other considerations as well, like: - faster deployment of technologies due to industry and market interest - forum for customers to have a direct link into development for new or improved functionality - ability for these efforts to be utilized by emerging companies, academic users and enthusiasts but in a guided and collaborative fashion So the focus is more on the output as opposed to the process. If the output is in fact very new, this is a very effective way to nurture innovation and determine viability for virtualization management. Best, Adam -----Original Message----- From: Karsten Wade [mailto:kwade@redhat.com] Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 12:16 PM To: project-planning@ovirt.org Subject: what and why - oVirt positioning There was a short and lively discussion on the phone today about why we are building an open virtualization community from the ground up. For example, people are being asked why we aren't putting this energy in to joining existing open-virt efforts. The problem with the latter discussion is it too easily gets in to comparing fresh oranges with dried bananas - that is, it appears to be a common discussion domain (fruit!), but the form, function, and contents are very different. In the end, if you are going to talk about fresh oranges, it doesn't make sense to bring up dried bananas. Bringing this discussion to the mailing list, this gives us a chance to work out our ideas in an open forum (that is, these archives will eventually be open to the public.) Thus a consensus here about why to do this project proves the point that this is an open leadership community from the outset. One theme that came up today I paraphrase here: We have very specific ideas about how to do things the open source way, learned from places such as Apache and Eclipse: * Involve key stakeholders from the beginning; * Require them to put a real stake down to be first-movers; * Make the community from the very outset openly constructed for shared control and management; * Show how to earn a seat at the board table; * Design and build leadership so consensus rolls up and down from sub-projects to a central governance body; * The community sets the project's direction by consensus from the outset. ... then condensing it: The only way to ensure a community is open and moving in the correct direction is to do it right from the start. There's no mistake in starting a new effort to accomplish those goals. ... another version: We're building an open virtualization project from the ground-up, involving key stakeholders as a start, and aggressively focusing on an open governance and project model. As we proceed, if our technology and community-style fit with all these other virtualization and cloud efforts, then integration will go more smoothly. Those are some ideas to start off. Why do *you* think we are doing the oVirt Project? - Karsten -- name: Karsten 'quaid' Wade, Sr. Community Gardener team: Red Hat Community Architecture & Leadership uri: http://communityleadershipteam.org http://TheOpenSourceWay.org gpg: AD0E0C41
participants (2)
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Karsten Wade
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Mendoza, Adam