February 2002
OpenMPE fills board with 3000
veterans
Organization works on non-profit status while HP studies
source code prospects
Founders of the group dedicated to preserving the life of MPE
beyond HPs plans formed an elected a board of directors last
month, with HP permitting one of its top engineers to take a board
seat as well.
HPs Jeff Vance was named in a write-in ballot
conducted over the Internet, joining eight directors who were
nominated and then voted in during a one-week process in early
January. Jon Backus, the newly elected board chairman of the
organization, reported that once Vance was named on more ballots than
any other HP staffer, he had to get HP to approve his involvement in
OpenMPE, Inc. before he could accept the board seat.
He spoke with his management at HP to make sure it
was acceptable, Backus said. He said they were
supportive of him being on the board. While this should
not be construed as a commitment of any type from HP for the OpenMPE
movement or any other type of effort to extend the life of MPE, it is
a display that HP is willing to explore the options.
HP
gave more indication that OpenMPE is in its planning process during
its latest customer Webcast. R&D manager Dave Wilde of the HP
3000 division said that HP has pruned out the suggestions
of selling the division in total or making MPE a fully Open Sourced
project. But OpenMPE has taken a place on the HP radar screen while
it determines how it can help the operating systems customers
who choose to stay on the platform.
Were interested in working with specific
partners about what alternatives would best serve the needs of our
customer, Wilde said in reply to a question about the status of
OpenMPE. And OpenMPE is one of the groups that were
continuing to work with and discuss with. One of our architects is on
the recently formed board of directors for that group, and we are
continuing to work with the OpenMPE group to understand its proposals
and suggestions. Well be considering that as one of the ways
that well be working to meet the needs of our
customers.
The board elected officers in its first meeting during
January, naming M.B. Foster Associates founder Birket Foster
whos also the chair of the Interex SIGSoftvend utility
software vendors group as vice-chairman. Mark Klein, president
of consultancy DIS International and recent Vice President of
Technology at Orbit Software, was named treasurer, and
programmer/analyst Ted Ashton of Southern Adventist University was
named secretary.
Other members serving on the board include John Marrah,
president of application vendor Ecometry; Chris Miller, president of
application vendor Genesis Total Solutions; Christian Lheureux of
French vendor APPIC; and Ken Sletten, chairman of the SIG-IMAGE/SQL
special interest group.
Backus said the group is working on a number of fronts in
its first month of existence, with a primary goal of getting 501-C
non-profit status from the US Internal Revenue Service. Gaining the
status would make contributions to OpenMPE tax-deductible, Backus
said. The group is to be organized like a mutual insurance company,
where the insured group would be MPE customers who pay on policies
for support and enhancement services from OpenMPE, Inc.
Customers wont automatically be part owners
going forward, Backus said. Making money to cover
expenses is very important, even though we are seeking non-profit
status. To become a part owner in the company, there will be
opportunities for end-users to purchase user policies, and vendors to
purchase vendor policies.
Backus said the policies are support agreements and
license agreements that entitle users to updates and patches for the
operating system. A vendor policy would deliver developer access to
the OpenMPE labs, a group of technicians which would be managed by
OpenMPE.
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