Monday, July 7, 2008

We Are Hiring!

We are now expanding our development team and hiring for new positions.

You can find the most immediate job posting under "Are you ready to push the Drupal limits?" on drupal.org. The question is there simply because pushing the limits is what we want our developers to do!

Please contact me if you are interested, know somebody who are interested, or have any ideas about how to best hire the right people for the job.

Is hiring great talent












Sunday, July 6, 2008

Out of Stealth Mode

After many months of hard work, our new startup is out of stealth mode. We have launched our platform, we have launched paying customers, and we have many more in the pipeline! Our goal with the new company is to revolutionize Continued Medical Education (CME) - you can check out our web-site for more information. Needless to say, we could not have pulled off such a feature rich solution in such a short time with heavy use of open source software. I will get into more details later...



In 2008: Time from Company Launch to Paying Customers?











Monday, March 10, 2008

Moving on From Black Duck

As Doug Levin mentioned in his recent The “Great Dane” moves on posting, I left Black Duck Software after nearly 5 years serving as CTO, in order to join a couple of friends in a new venture!

It was a very hard decision, but I am very excited about this new venture. Black Duck is not forgotten as I can still continue to contribute good (and crazy) ideas as an advisor.

Black Duck has come very far from the beginning when I met Doug in a Starbucks in April 2003 (it really was that long ago!) until today where we have a very established organization with customers and offices worldwide. I am very proud of what we have accomplished so for at Black Duck, and I am looking forward to seeing Black Duck continuing to expand and dominate the market.

The new venture is still in stealth mode, but I can say that we are working with many open source projects in order to put our product offering together.

Monday, February 4, 2008

A Brief History of Open Source and A Sneak Preview of its Future

This was the title of a talk I was part of giving at MIT Friday along with a long-term friend and colleague Valérie Frayssé. It was part of the Computational Research in Boston (CRiB) seminar series and was quite well attended, as we nearly filled up one of the auditoriums in MITs Stata Center. I would like to thank Alan Edelman and Steven Johnson for inviting us and organizing this event.

There were many questions about open source licensing and I was quite impressed by how much effort some of the researchers have put into understanding the licensing issues. The questions also reflected different concerns by different people - a couple of very different concerns were clearly illustrated by the following questions: "How many lines of code does it take to be considered a copy?", "How do I choose a license that assures that I always get acknowledgments?", "How can I enforce my license (especially wrt acknowledgements)?", and a discussion about how licensing works for sharing government contracting work while keeping it at different security levels.

I loved the fact that the questions were very different from the ones I typically hear in a commercial environment, but they do reflect the concerns of a very interesting portion of the open source contributors. What do you think they particularly care about?


Researchers care about a license which