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OpenSUSE's first governing board is set up
Nov. 12, 2007

Novell has recently decided to start setting openSUSE free from direct Novell oversight by setting up the first openSUSE board of directors.

In an openSUSE blog notice, Novell and openSUSE announced the first openSUSE board. The openSUSE board will lead the overall community Linux project.

The new board's main tasks will be to 1): act as a central point of contact for the distribution; 2) help resolve conflicts between community interests and Novell; 3) facilitate communication with all areas of the community; and 4) help determine the distribution's direction.

The board will not be serving as openSUSE's executive branch. Instead it will provide guidance and support existing governance structures instead of directing or controlling development. That's because the community sets development goals.

Novell appointed this first board. In the future, though, the board members will be elected by the community and the chair person appointed by Novell. One of the missions of this initial board is to define a process to elect the next board.

The openSUSE's board first members include Pascal Bleser a software architect and developer at a large European ISV and maintainer of the popular Packman and openSUSE Build Service repositories, and Francis Giannaros, an openSUSE community activist.

The other three board members come from Novell. They are Andreas Jaeger, Novell openSUSE director; Stephan Kulow, Novell openSUSE's project manager; and Federico Mena-Quintero, who works on GNOME-related projects.

The relationship of community distributions and commercial distributions has been a complicated one. Some communities, such as Debian, never develop an official business distributor. Some distributors start a community distribution, such as Red Hat and Fedora, but in the end, Red Hat maintained control of the community. Novell seems to be heading towards a middle position.


Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols



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