Martin Schulze Steps Down As SPI Vice President 123
Tina Gasperson reports on NewsForge that Martin Schulze, Vice President of Software in the Public Interest, is resigning his position there to protest the lack of time he says fellow SPI higher-ups are devoting to the organization. Since SPI serves as a coordinating body for several large-scale Free software projects (like GNOME and OpenOffice.org), discord there should concern a lot of people. Update: 11/26 03:14 GMT by T : That should read "OpenSource.org," not "OpenOffice.org." Sorry.
Well... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Well... (Score:2, Funny)
Really? (Score:1, Funny)
Wait, so they have an organization where all the bloated and out-of-control projects go to congregate? Is it like AA or Overeaters Anonymous? Wow, they've got everything on the Internet these days!
Re:Really? (Score:1)
Re:Really? (Score:1)
text of the article (Score:5, Informative)
Citing frustration over the operations of Software in the Public Interest [spi-inc.org], its Vice President Martin Schulze gave an ultimatum: either the President, Secretary, and one of the board of directors resigns, or he does. Guess who's leaving? Schulze asked Nils Lohner, president; Wichert Akkerman, secretary, and Ian Jackson of the B.O.D. to step down because he felt they weren't dedicating enough time and effort to their positions. "All three of them have shown in the past that they are able to give valuable input to various issues. However, all three have also shown that they are too busy to work on the tasks they signed up once. Hence, they should resign and let less busy people to the work instead," he wrote in a petition to the SPI membership.
"I don't see how SPI can work properly without a functioning Secretary and Board members who are too busy to make it even to the meetings. If those people wish to work on SPI matters and if their input is valuable, they should rather act as formal advisor, so SPI doesn't suffer from their overload but can benefit from their input," he added.
"In our current situation, with the currently assembled Board of Directors, with too many too busy Board members who are permanently not able to attend IRC Board meetings, join discussions and votes via mail and - from my perspective - a non-functioning Secretary with too many pending issues and problems writing and correcting minutes etc., I don't see a chance for SPI to work as our members and affiliated projects deserve.
"I believe that the Board requires a large change and that these members need to free their position so new people with more time and enthusiasm can join the Board and work on behalf of SPI."
Schulze wrote that, of the three he asked to resign, only Nils Lohner responded - and according to Schulze he has agreed to step down from his position as president. "Nils Lohner told the Board half a year ago that he will be absent for half a year. Once he was back, he let us know that he intends to resign since his new work environment did not leave enough room for SPI and he would not be able to act a Board member accordingly. Neither Wichert nor Ian even raised a word," says Schulze.
Barring voluntary resignations, Schulze noted article seven of the SPI by-laws, which provides for the forced removal of a director when "sufficient causes exist for such removal."
But ultimately, Schulze decided to remove himself from the situation, rather than pursue the matter further. "I hereby step down as vice president of Software in the Public Interest, Inc. I have announced the intention to step more than two weeks ago, and I also asked for help about a week later with no responses," he announced.
Software in the Public Interest, Inc., was established as a non-profit in 1997 and acts as an umbrella for Free Software projects such as Debian, GNOME, and OpenSource.org. The last published minutes are from a July 2002 board meeting, when the group officially approved GNU Texmacs as a sponsored project. At that meeting they also turned down Bruce Perens' request for the organization to get on board with his Sincer Choice initiative, because of its claim "We support a broad range of copyright policies, from Public Domain through Open Source and Free Software to Proprietary." SPI board members stated that it is a Free Software organization and does not agree with any policy that supports proprietary software.
Since Schulze's resignation on Sunday, 19-year-old Debian developer Jimmy Kaplowitz threw his hat into the ring, stating "Right now, SPI membership means very little other than a subscription to spi-private. We should involve the members, so that we can receive their input and ideas. This would involve more use of the public and members-only mailing lists, wherever it wouldn't violate confidentiality. I am thinking now of Nils Lohner's message to spi-general when membership was first introduced, and we need to again ask the members what they want the board to be doing.
"I would be honored to serve as an SPI board member, and I hope that I am given the chance."
Call it burn out? What would Microsoft Do? (Score:1)
Think of the centuries of business history being generated. So with this in mind:
"Let's look at what David Thielen revealed in his book The 12 Simple Secrets of Microsoft Management
1 Hire the best
At Microsoft, the single most important contributor to productivity is regarded as the quality of the employees. Without the very best staff, it is unlikely you will realise your full business potential.
2 Bet the company
Bill Gates has never been afraid to completely alter the direction of Microsoft if he believes it necessary to maintain the dominant position of the company (consider his heavy gambles on Windows). If you are convinced that your company needs to move into new areas to stay ahead of the game, have the courage of your convictions.
3 Require failure
Microsoft not only forgives genuine mistakes by its employees, it positively expects them! Employees are required to show initiative and take responsibility. Reasonable failures are therefore expected.
4 Managers must be qualified
Microsoft's managers are required to have a good detailed technical knowledge of the work being carried out by their teams. This means they have the respect of their staff and can make informed decisions.
5 Measure employees on performance
The value of a Microsoft employee is judged entirely by his or her actual day-to-day performance. This is valued far above length of service, experience, loyalty or past successes. The highest standards are therefore certain to be maintained.
6 Spend money frugally
Microsoft insists on a corporate culture of modest spending on peripherals: employees do not take expensive flights; offices are uniformly simple, even for the top executives; and entertaining is never unnecessarily lavish.
7 Keep it small
Microsoft attempts to maintain the advantages enjoyed by small businesses, such as autonomy, good communication and mobility. It divides itself as far as possible into small work groups which, while still pursuing a common goal, are each functionally independent.
8 Think 'Domination'
Microsoft cultivates a culture where every employee is focused on 'total world domination'.
Encourage your employees to think of every project in terms of winning market share and dominating the marketplace.
9 'Bill is watching'
The very top level of Microsoft management, and that includes Bill Gates him-self, exert enormous control over every aspect of the company. They do this by insisting on a hands-on approach and always finding time to investigate the detailed workings of specific projects. They are never wholly 'out-of-touch' with the day-to-day running of the business.
10 Great morale is essential
Morale directly affects employee productivity. Microsoft make sure their staff are happy and have a great team spirit. This means allowing them freedom, ownership of projects and good reward packages, including share options."
*You can't get better ownership plan than the SPI.
"11 Cut the bureaucracy
Microsoft is very conscious of eliminating any unnecessary red tape that reduces its efficiency. Employee complaints about bureaucracy are taken seriously, and meetings are always expected to produce real decisions.
12 Make staff feel at home"
Pure "Microsoft"?
Small managment lesson for SPI?
Just make you giggle?
Sincere Choice note (Score:3, Informative)
Bruce
Ian Jackson's initial response (Score:1)
I mentioned this article to Ian Jackson just now, and it was the first he'd heard of any of this.
Yet Another Open-Source Pissing Contest (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yet Another Open-Source Pissing Contest (Score:4, Insightful)
Interesting title to your post, BTW; it makes me wonder if the goal of the contest is not so much the pissing as it is putting out a fire?
Thanks for the golden shower, troll. (Score:3, Interesting)
Nah, no one wants free software to go away except vendors of crappy closed source software. Free and Open software folks can have their differences but the commonality is much greater.
Since (almost) noone is making money doing it, the primary form of compensation is ego gratification.
What a crock, lots of people are making a good living with free software. Even pioneers such as RMS got by. Now that free software is universally recognized as superior to other software, there is a much larger demand. Show me someone who does not get some ego gratification from their job and I'll show you someone who should be doing something else.
If someone doesn't get their way, they throw a temper tantrum and go off on their own.
This is unique to free software? -Bangs his fist and insults a federal judge- Have you ever seen the monkeyboy dance [earthlink.net]? If your eyes don't convince you, just read this article [nytimes.com]. I would never ever want to work at a place like that. It looks like they treat each other worse than they treat the rest of the world.
The end result is forked code trees, huge amounts of duplicated effort, and projects that never go anywhere.
Said another way, free software could never make a working operating system, an easy to use GUI, it's chaos, blah, blah, bull shit on a stick This message posted with Mozilla and [mozilla.org] Windowmaker [windowmaker.org] on X11 under Debian [debian.org], software so superior to comercial junk I can never ever go back.
SPI will survive this little tussle and free softare will survive SPI.
Re:Yet Another Open-Source Pissing Contest (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:Yet Another Open-Source Pissing Contest (Score:2)
Let me tell you one thing. I and many sysadmins started to get real money when we went Linux/BSD/Solaris/AIX/Novell. Yes, some of these systems are commercial but you should note that 90% of the main apps used on them, are OSS certified. Anyway, I could see my salary going four times higher than before. And I had 13 years of DOS/Windows experience before kicking the whole crap outta my desk. And what I and many other of my colleagues do now is ten times more complex and subtile than what you could do under Windows crappyness. I should remark you that to find some stupid detail inside Windows code, that was causing critical problems, I had to dig up over tons of documentation for days or even weeks. That C2 certification whoopla on NT, took me one month to end up with the clear and straight fact that one cannot enforce the most basic of C2 specs inside that shitty NT 4, no matter the stupid hype and NSA's docs. Similar things never happened to me under OSS - to get a positive or negative answer, I get things straight in a matter of hours or a few days. And that's what people like on me, because time is damn bloody money no matter you do it in closed or open source.
And that's my ego gratification.
Re:Yet Another Open-Source Pissing Contest (Score:2)
The only possible difference is that the open source community is more transparent than most groups. Discussions, complaints, and outright fueds take place in public forums (and I'm sure there are more than a few goings-on behind closed doors too). And if the forum in question is too obscure for the majority, sites like Slashdot are sure to tune everyone in on the juicy details.
Steve Jobs supposedly claimed that creating was a messy process. Perhapse he's right. There will be disagreements and conflicting ideas. These will lead to code forks and duplicated effort. Projects will compete. Some will die. The successful ones will flourish.
Does it always have to be this way? No. A lot can be done with complete cooperation. But it is simply not within human nature to cooperate fully all the time - within open source projects or any other endeavor.
A 19 year old??? (Score:2, Flamebait)
"I would be honored to serve as an SPI board member, and I hope that I am given the chance."
This must be some prestigious organization if a 19 year old is offering to serve on the board...
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's a pretty contemptible position to hold. As it seems you have no idea of Jimmy Kaplowitz's capabilities or experience, you're judging him based solely on age - which is likely to be irrelevant. I hope the SPI does take him seriously. Surely the more legitimate position would be not to question the SPI because a 19 year old threw his hat into the ring, but to firstly determine his suitability based on relevant criteria, and secondly to question why this doesn't happen more often with more mainstream boards (and not just non-profits, either). I've met some pretty impressive 19 year olds before; there are no doubt many, many more that I haven't met.
Alister
Re:A question (Score:1, Interesting)
Back the actual question, nobody is claiming that 19 year olds are subhuman. The claim is that they are inexperienced. You are right that "young" and "inexperienced" are non-synonymous. But one is a proper subset of the other, pretty much by definition.
Saying young people are inexperienced isn't maligning their character. It is akin to saying black people are poor. An unfortunate and to-be-mended, but nonetheless entirely factual circumstance.
From your link (Score:1)
Oops.
Re:A question (Score:2)
I think you're wrong. What you're describing may be considered tendencies, but youth is not necessarily related to experience. There are a large number of inexperienced middle-aged people around. This is, amongst other things, a result of retraining. I worked with someone in his 40s who had less experience than I did, because he'd been a diesel mechanic for 20 years. I was not much older than 19 myself, and had a management position. And I've met people younger than that with a great deal of experience in selected areas. Granted, a young person is presumably less likely to be a polymath, but there are young people who have expert knowledge in defined fields.
Alister
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2)
Ageism. Nice. You know like racism except it is focused on discrimination because of age. I've met plenty of 19 year olds with more intelligence, class, and maturity than 40 year olds. And, by the looks of it, you.
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:1)
Which would be my point this kid is 19 and is entrusted to vote. blah. I shouldn't be feeding the trolls.
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2)
You are broaching some pretty heavy territory, philosophy, law, sociology... age of majority, age of consent, etc.
You are able to legally consent for some things long before you reach the legal age of 18. You are also, for some matters, entitled to total confidentiality, despite your legal status as a "minor." Our society has determined, however, that there are some matters that require a certain age in order to appreciate the ramifications. For example, it's not legal to have sex with a 10yo boy (you NAMBLA people can all die), even if they consent, precisely because they don't have the mental capacity/maturity to understand the consequences of that decision.
Honestly, subjective stability has very little to do with it, unless you are attempting to establish (or undermine) competency before a court of law.
19yo, legal for pretty much everything. As long as he's not a mental case, there should be no beef (plus, in the US, going to dinners and meetings and such, you wouldn't have to buy him beers for a couple more years. Think of the money you'd save!).
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2)
And, while I've met some 40 year olds who were as immature as most 19 year olds, too, I've never met a 19 year old that was truly as matured in a well-rounded sense (meaning more than just having a sense of presence) than a decently mature 40 year old.
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:5, Insightful)
There's no reason why someone who's been on this earth a little longer automatically deserves more respect. Experience can often help, but is surely no guarantee.
Judge the guy on what he does, not on his age, skin tone, sex,
Read your entire post again, and compare your and his comments. Who deserves the most respect?
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2, Interesting)
No ? Then perhaps you are also of tender years ?
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2)
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2)
Now tell me that the job of stable kernel maintainer doesn't involve "human interactions and politics".
That wasn't my point, however. My point was that you should judge him on his actions, not automatically assume he must be crap at human interactions and politics because he's 19, or technical minded (geek -> bad social skills? almost catched another prejudice
In other words, I agree that there might be alot of 19 year olds with good technical skills and bad social skills. I merely wanted the original poster to change his default assumptions, there's probably a bunch of 19-year olds that _are_ up to the task. And if people with these prejudices are in a position of power, these young ones would not be given a chance.
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:1)
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:1)
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:1)
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2)
I've met Jimmy. He's a pretty prestigious guy. Can't say the same about you, though.
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:3, Insightful)
Some people develop more quickly than others... how old was Alexander the Great when he conquered the known world? 20?
Some of us were unvarnished idiots when we were 19 years old (speaking only for my own idiocy of course... some people would say nothing's changed... oh well), but this guy might be the next Einstein or Fermi.
Anyway, getting to the point, you really should judge this individual based on his qualifications, and nothing else. Anything less, and you run the risk of being labeled, perhaps rightly, as some kind of age/sex/race/religion/etc bigot (as some posters have already alleged). Objective criteria should be your only yardstick.
I don't know the individual in question, so I cannot vouch for his savant-like programming 5k1LLZ (or lack thereof).
Give the guy a chance. Really. What could it hurt?
Re:A 19 year old??? (Score:2)
Boundless idealism and energy, as frequently espoused by the youth of today, have no place *at all* in the boundlessly idealistic open source movement.
Signed, a 34 year old Bitter.
Idiot.
It's always a pity... (Score:5, Insightful)
And while all parties involved will (of course) deny that the cause is personal issues, it seems rather obvious.
I mean, the VP resigns because he feels the other high ranking officials aren't "dedicated" enough? In whose opinion? And why not appoint other functionaries to do the jobs that need doing?
No, resignations like this (especially the sort where you have "either they all resign or I do...") are almost always personally motivated out of a feeling to "show someone" how much in the wrong they are.
And it almost never helps. This is a lose-lose situation. Imagine if the rest of the board had resigned... credibility would fly out the window.
Like I said, it is always saddening when a good organization has problems because of people not getting along. While I don't know a lot about SPI, it seems they do, uhm open source stuff (:P their website is kinda hard to understand in that it is very very generalized. Slashdot could have the same mission statement as them and not change significantly).
Re:It's always a pity... (Score:2)
Let's say, honestly, that the senior management really wasn't dedicated enough. Now, if you hired the guys and then retained them, then that's your fault, but a lot of times, people either were hired significantly before you arrived or don't report directly to you. Firing a large portion of the senior management can be extremely demoralizing in that case, especially if you have to leapfrog over your managers or bully them into doing it (because it implies they are incompetent). Even if you try to string it out, you have a problem, because if you respond to the problem fast enough, people will lose morale, whereas if you take too long, the problems that these people cause will simply get worse. So frequently you end up trying to compromise: you fire or at least shift around responsibility as far as you can and try to enliven things. A lot of times, if the manager is competent, that works, and things improve enough that you can wait for the next round (if needed; a lot of times, revitalizing management by removing the deadwood exposes some real gems that previously didn't shine). Sometimes, it really just does not, and you're stuck. Further, sometimes, the people, as in my case, are too thoroughly entrenched (kinship or friendship reasons, for example), and you really have only two options: resign, or ride the ship down. I chose to resign.
I'm not saying that he absolutely resigned because he was in exactly the same situation. He may not have been a competent manager, and certainly, I would never declare that either everyone went or I went even if that really was the situation, because it would needlessly embitter everyone in volved. But there are really legitimate reasons why even a very good CEO or president may resign other than his (or her) incompetency.
Re:It's always a pity... (Score:5, Insightful)
SHUT THE FUCK UP.
How dare you personally attack Martin? He is one of the most dedicated people I know - not only to SPI, but also to Debian. And those are just the projects I'm part of, the ones where I acutally know what the hell I'm talking about. (Hint.)SPI board meetings are a joke. They're poorly attended, and they ... well, I won't go any further than that.
It really makes me sad that Martin's leaving (or trying to), but if he manages to accomplish some change on the way out (and I fully believe this is what he's trying to do - there are times when you've done absolutely everything you could do, and it's just time to say "okay, I've done my best, and it just isn't happeningRe:It's always a pity... (Score:1)
I left a dot com company because I couldn't put in the hours to the job and a girlfriend at the same time.
I believe that as a result of leaving, they brought the hours per day down from 14-16 to a compulsory max of eight. Too late for me, but it helped my friends.
Agreed. (Score:4, Interesting)
Bruce
Re:It's always a pity... (Score:2)
I'm flattered you track my posts ;)
That being said, they aren't all angry. But yeah, the majority of them are. *shrug* - why would I bother posting if I didn't care about something? If I'm not angry, and I care about something, all I'd be doing by posting is cheerleading. And I've never been a cheerleader ;)
I wasn't directly criticizing him (Score:2)
As I said, the organization would likely have been better served by change from within: hiring additional people, re allocating tasks, and so on.
I think that resignations of this sort are not a productive behavior for the company involved. Sure, it may have been the *right thing* for him to do, due to personal issues with the people, but I seriously doubt that his resignation has helped SPI.
It is interesting, however, that you indiscriminately flame me on the suspicion of critizing Martin Schulze. "FUCK YOU" is not really an educated or helpful retort. Saying Martin "contributed a lot" to the program just proves my point--as his leaving can only hurt SPI. As I said, I was not analysing his personal decision, but rather saying that resignations of this sort are bad for the company.
And, again, like I said before, if the entire board resigns, SPI loses credibility and looks ineffectual. If the primary contributor resigns, SPI end up being ineffectual. So it is lose - lose.
Re:I wasn't directly criticizing him (Score:2)
An unsung free software hero (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a case of someone dedicating huge amounts of time in the best traditions of free software -- something that few can do, either because of finances, other life pressures, or simply human limitations. This makes Joey an overachiever in the best sense of the word.
The poster was right: this resignation spells trouble for free software. It's a sign of distress and it should cause some thought to be given to the issues of time/work and free software: Is there a better way we can encourage people to commit their time to free software projects? Is there a way we can give these hard working people who do all of the non-glamorous -- but necessary -- work behind the scenes the recogition they deserve?
Yes, there is a better way. (Score:2)
Is there a better way we can encourage people to commit their time to free software projects? Is there a way we can give these hard working people who do all of the non-glamorous -- but necessary -- work behind the scenes the recogition they deserve?
According to the article, this was the problem:
Schulze asked Nils Lohner, president; Wichert Akkerman, secretary, and Ian Jackson of the B.O.D. to step down because he felt they weren't dedicating enough time and effort to their positions.
Shit, even if true! More is better. When someone is not getting work done, throw more people at it. Devide the tasks, appoint new people, get the work done. The secretary missed a few meetings? Get two. The president is unable to make enough decisions, get another vice president. What good is done by humiliating people? What good is done when you quit? None. If there really are people rearing to go, sign them on.
Sigh, I know, resources are finite and all that. Barf.
Re:Yes, there is a better way. (Score:1)
Hmm, Peter Cochrane posted an article on silcon.com recently going into the details of how much work a given number of people produce, 1 person does one persons work, 2 do 1.75 peoples work etc...
Not to be a troll but ... (Score:5, Interesting)
I understand what he is trying to do, but maybe its not the best of going about it, good luck to him though.
Re:Not to be a troll but ... (Score:2)
I wouldn't immediately label this as a troll, to be honest - at least, the question deserves to be asked ;)
There are some internal problems with SPI (touched upon in the article), and if you really care about something, and try to make it better, there comes a point when you're just too frustrated and have to say, "well, this is it. I've done everything and anything I can - it's not getting any better. Let's see if, maybe, I can accomplish something on the way out..."
(Now, if you are however suggesting that regardless of any personal hardships, he should do what we tell him, damnit, then yeah, I'd say you were a troll. :)
Re:Not to be a troll but ... (Score:2)
Short term, yes. Long term, no. He's already got the President to resign. If he can embarass another one of them into resigning, then 3 of the 4 positions (including his own) can be filled with people who have far more time to dedicate to the meetings. Long term, that is only good for the organization. I think his efforts are already working. I'm impressed. I hope the other members are humiliated enough to step down.
News page dates from June 2001 (Score:5, Insightful)
Concrete proof noone's putting in the efforts...
It doesn't concern me particularly.. (Score:1, Interesting)
this makes sense, NOT! (Score:1)
I don't know the guy, but I'm sure he has his reasons.
Ti me = Money (Score:1)
Sucks when the real world interupts a nice daydream...
19 yr old (Score:1)
Am I living in a hole? (Score:2, Interesting)
Joey did send a mail, forwarded by Bdale Garbee to debian-devel-announce@lists.debian.org that essentially stated:
Some members of the current Board of Directors of Software in the Public Interest would like to expand its Board.
In that e-mail he solicited nominations and suggested that candidates must have time to devote to the board.
It is true, without a doubt that SPI, and its Board of Directors, have not done anything in the last year that makes me consider SPI to be anything other than a formality designed to collect money for Debian and other worthy causes. I think the SPI website [spi-inc.org] explains it best:
News
No items for this year.
So, I applaud Joey's decision. Maybe someone will wake up and realise, SPI has a role to fulfill and it's not doing it right now.
And maybe Joey will have even more time to write the Debian Weekly News, since nobody else is willing to do it
Geek History: The Other SPI: Simulations Pub. Inc. (Score:3, Informative)
IIRC (and if not, this being Slashdot, I'm sure someone will correct me), they were bought out by Avalon Hill, which in turn was bought out by TSR, which in turn was bought out by Wizards of the Coast, which in turn was bought out by Hasbro.
Anyone who remembers the original SPI now has permission to feel very. very old...
Re:Geek History: The Other SPI: Simulations Pub. I (Score:2)
Wow, the good old days!
Re:Geek History: The Other SPI: Simulations Pub. I (Score:1)
Sorry, just had to prove this was slashdot. And that I'm very, very, old ;)
A quote from the SPI Website... (Score:1)
No items for this year."
Must more be said? They dont actually do anything... according to their website anyway. It seems they're just a source of funds for smaller entities that do something.
Re:A quote from the SPI Website... (Score:2)
Close. They're not so much a source of funds as a holding pen for funds, as well as for trademarks and other things that need some sort of legal entity to exist in the "real world" (the world of banks and tax collectors and whatnot). They're a non-profit, so donations to the member projects can be tax-deductable.
Basically, SPI is the creation of the Debian project, to give themselves a legal existance. But instead of making it specific to Debian, they decided to create an open-ended organization that could provide similar services to other projects.
And those other entities aren't smaller (except insofar as they're all part of SPI). No, SPI doesn't do much, but it doesn't really need to do much. Debian and Gnome mostly run themselves. But if SPI didn't exist, then we (and by "we," I mean Debian) would have had to invent them. Oh wait, we did!
Thank You Joey (Score:4, Informative)
Remember that being a board member of SPI is not a paid position. Not even an honourarium comes with the role. It is a serious time commitment and not everyone has the time necessary to commit to such endeavours.
I'd like to point out that Joey has not resigned from SPI's board, but only as the Vice President. He has not indicated he will dedicate any less time to the project, nor has he given up on its success. He is offering the opportunity for someone else to carry the torch.
For my part, I'd like to say:
Joey, you're an asset to the community and I look forward to continuing to work with you. Thank you.
David "cdlu" Graham
Typical (Score:1)
Clarification (Score:2)
Joey Schulze is stepping down as Vice-President, but that doesn't mean he is giving up his position as a member of the SPI Board of Directors. The bylaws do not require him to do so, and we have clarified this on the SPI Board mailing list today. To the relief of the active Board members, Joey's current intention does appear to be to remain on the Board. We'll need his energy and input.
This article did do at least one good thing, in that it apparently prompted Ian Jackson to check his SPI Board email...
Anyway, SPI is currently soliciting self-nominations for positions on the SPI Board of Directors [spi-inc.org]. If you're a member of the Free Software and/or Open Source Software communities, and find that you share the goals listed in SPI's bylaws [spi-inc.org] (see section two), you may want to submit yourself for consideration.
Also, SPI can be strengthened with regular memberships [spi-inc.org] as well (yes, I know the SSL cert needs to be renewed). Historically, only SPI's Board has been particularly active, and sometimes not even that. If you'd like to change SPI for the better, we sure could use your help.
Thanks for listening; I hope we can turn this disappointment into an opportunity for SPI to improve. We need your help to do it.
Branden Robinson, SPI Treasurer
Will the last SPI board member? (Score:2)
-russ
Last Post! (Score:1)
rational coordination of impulses and guts, or for centuries civilization
will sink into a mere welter of minor excitements. We must provide a
Great Age or see the collapse of the upward striving of the human race.
-- Alfred North Whitehead
- this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...
Re:Alphabet and numbers (Score:2, Funny)