Hi Andrus, Thanks for your support. I think this'll be a good home for Wave to grow and mature.
I've taken the liberty of adding you on the mentor list. :) Cheers, -Dan On Wed, Nov 24, 2010 at 1:20 AM, Andrus Adamchik <and...@objectstyle.org>wrote: > +1 > > I am so happy that after all considerations and suggestions that were > floated in the Wave community, you guys picked Apache as the place to > develop Wave community and WIAB. Good luck and let me know if you need extra > mentors (you already have 4, so I figured you are covered and didn't add > myself to the list). > > Cheers, > Andrus > > On Nov 23, 2010, at 10:16 PM, Dan Peterson wrote: > > > Hello all, > > > > We'd like to propose Wave for entry into the ASF incubator. > > > > The draft proposal is available at: > > http://wiki.apache.org/incubator/WaveProposal > > (for your convenience, a snapshot is also copied below) > > > > A wave is a hosted, live, concurrent data structure for rich > communication. > > It can be used like email, chat, or a document. Wave in a Box (WIAB) is > the > > name of the main product at the moment, which is a server that hosts and > > federates waves, supports extensive APIs, and provides a rich web client. > > This project also includes an implementation of the Wave Federation > > protocol, to enable federated collaboration systems (such as multiple > > interoperable Wave In a Box instances). > > > > As a result of the recent Wave Summit, beyond growing a few new > committers, > > we've put together the following proposal for migrating the community > into > > the ASF incubator. More details on the summit & Wave in a Box progress in > > this blogpost: > > > http://googlewavedev.blogspot.com/2010/11/this-weeks-wave-protocol-summit-updates.html > > > > We are looking forward to your feedback and suggestions. > > > > By the way, if you're looking to learn more about the technology related > to > > wave, you can see the videos and presentations from the recent Wave > Summit > > in: https://wave.google.com/wave/waveref/googlewave.com/w+rwFyiw47A > > > > Kind regards, > > -Dan, on behalf of the Wave Community > > > > P.S. For those on the wave-protocol Google Group (that aren't yet on > > general@incubator.apache.org), please participate in this discussion > > by sending a message to general-subscribe at incubator dot apache dot org > > > > > > Apache Wave Proposal (Apache Incubator) > > > > = Abstract = > > > > Apache Wave is the project where wave technology is developed at Apache. > > Wave in a Box (WIAB) is the name of the main product at the moment, which > is > > a server that hosts and federates waves, supports extensive APIs, and > > provides a rich web client. This project also includes an implementation > of > > the Wave Federation protocol, to enable federated collaboration systems > > (such as multiple interoperable Wave In a Box instances). > > > > = Proposal = > > > > A wave is a hosted, live, concurrent data structure for rich > communication. > > It can be used like email, chat, or a document. > > > > WIAB is a server that hosts waves. The best analogy for this is a mail > > server with a web client. WIAB is comprised of a few high-level > components: > > the client and the server. They have the following major functionality > > (though this is not an exhaustive list): > > > > * Client > > *A dynamic web client for users to create, edit, and search waves. Users > > can access this client by directly visiting the server in a browser. > > * Gadgets provide the ability to insert, view, and modify the UI -- > > exposing the Wave Gadgets API ( > > http://code.google.com/apis/wave/extensions/gadgets/guide.html) > > * A console client that can create and edit waves via a > command-line-like > > interface. > > * Server > > * Hosts and stores waves. WIAB comes with a default storage mechanism. > The > > administrators of the server may configure it to use alternative storage > > mechanisms. > > * Indexing, allowing for searching the waves a user has access to. > > * Basic authentication, configurable to delegate to other systems. > > * Federation, allowing separate Wave in a Box servers to communicate > with > > each other using the Wave Federation Protocol ( > > http://www.waveprotocol.org/federation). > > * Robots, using the Wave Robots API, ( > > http://code.google.com/apis/wave/extensions/robots/) may interact with > waves > > on a WIAB instance. > > > > = Background = > > > > Wave expresses a new metaphor for communication: hosted conversations. > This > > was created by Lars and Jens Rasmussen after observation of people's use > of > > many separate forms of communication to get something done, e.g, email, > > chat, docs, blogs, twitter, etc. > > > > The vision has always been to better the way people communicate and > > collaborate. Building open protocols and sharing code available in an > open > > and free way is a critical part of that vision. Anyone should be able to > > bring up their own wave server and communicate with others (much like > SMTP). > > > > We hope this project will allow everyone to easily gain the benefits of > Wave > > with a standard implementation of Wave – in a box. > > > > = Rationale = > > > > Wave has shown it excels at small group collaboration when hosted by > Google. > > Although Wave will not continue as a standalone Google product, there is > a > > lot of interest from many organizations in both running Wave and building > > upon the technology for new products. > > > > We are confident that with the community-centric development environment > > fostered by the Apache Software Foundation, WIAB will thrive. > > > > = Initial Goals = > > > > The initial goals of the project are: > > > > 1. To migrate the codebase from code.google.com and integrate the > project > > with the ASF infrastructure (issue management, build, project site, etc). > > 1. To quickly reach a state where it is possible to continue the > > development of the Wave In a Box implementation under the ASF project. > > 1. To add new committers to the project and grow the community in "The > > Apache Way". > > > > = Current Status = > > > > The open source Wave in a Box project has existed in various forms for > > approximately 16 months (starting out life as the FedOne open source > > project). > > > > FedOne began in July 2009 in order to accelerate adoption of the wave > > federation protocol, and serve as a proof of concept that a non-Google > > implementation of the wave federation protocol could interoperate with > the > > Google production instance. It worked. FedOne's existence lead to a > > prototype by Novell that demonstrated federation between Google Wave and > > Novell Pulse (now known as Vibe). In addition, in May of 2010, SAP > unveiled > > a prototype version of SAP StreamWork that federated with both Novell > Pulse > > and Google Wave. All three systems interoperated, sharing real-time > state, > > and gadget updates. In May 2010 Google released significantly more code > > (including the cross-browser rich text editor) to connect with other > > components that were built from scratch, resulting in a simple web > client. > > > > The project has grown over the last year to include many Google and > > non-Google contributions. The project has picked up steam in recent > months > > as the direction of the standalone Google Wave product has shifted. At > this > > time the Wave in a Box project enjoys very active development, with new > > features and functionality being added almost daily. The first Wave > Protocol > > Summit was recently held and included developers from a variety of > > countries, companies, and organizations. > > > > The code base is a mixture of mature core code from Google Wave, and > > somewhat immature integration code forming WIAB. WIAB is quickly becoming > > highly functional and is already in a very "demoable" state. The > > development mailing lists are very active indicating wide community > > support. We recognize that now is a good time to migrate to the Apache > > Foundation while the codebase and community is a manageable size. > Assuming > > the current momentum continues, we expect strong growth in the code and > > community in the near future. > > > > == Meritocracy == > > > > The initial set of committers includes many Google employees, and there > is > > an active and growing community outside Google contributing to WIAB > already > > today. Google culture itself encourages meritocracy, and the community > has > > always grown – and will continue to grow – in this fashion. > > > > As shown by the initial committers list below, several members from > outside > > of Google have already demonstrated interest, skill, and commitment to > > contributing to the project. These individuals have been recognized on > > those merits by the initial committers. Their selection as the first > wave > > of new committers is a sign of the burgeoning meritocracy. > > > > == Community == > > > > Wave currently has a healthy community around waveprotocol.org, with > > conversations hosted at http://groups.google.com/group/wave-protocol. We > > plan to move this community to the Apache Software Foundation incubator. > > > > == Core Developers == > > > > The initial committers comes from a variety of backgrounds and includes > many > > from Google. There are a few existing Apache committers amongst this > initial > > group. We anticipate early future committers coming from places like > > Novell, SAP, companies related to the US Navy's usage of wave, startups > in > > the wave ecosystem, and many independent individuals. > > > > == Alignment == > > > > The developers of WIAB want to work with the Apache Software Foundation > > because Apache has proven to provide a strong foundation with good > > infrastructure and support for developing projects in an open community. > As > > WIAB continues to grow, the community will look to both reuse available > > Apache projects as well as look for opportunities to contribute back to > the > > larger Apache community. > > > > = Known Risks = > > > > == Orphaned products == > > > > Wave is a new means for communication, and thus it is still maturing. > While > > the initial implementation (Google Wave) did not gain sufficient traction > > for it to continue as a standalone Google product, there are other > related > > projects (e.g. Novell Vibe, SAP StreamWork), and several startups in the > > space that are continuing to build on the technology. In addition, the US > > Navy has contracted with four companies as part of evaluating using wave > > technology on every ship. The community itself is still growing, with > > several new contributors recently added. > > > > == Inexperience with Open Source == > > > > The initial committers have varying degrees of experience with open > source > > projects. Many from the community are familiar with open source. > > > > == Homogeneous Developers == > > > > The initial set of developers does include many from Google. However, the > > project has accepted many patches from independent individuals, and some > > have already gained committership. Several companies have expressed > interest > > and forty individuals participated in the Wave Summit. > > > > == Reliance on Salaried Developers == > > > > Following Google's change of focus for Wave in August, some of Wave's > Google > > developers have chosen to continue working on Wave, but it is imperative > > that we continue to grow the community larger in the coming months. > > > > == Relationships with Other Apache Products == > > > > We currently use the following libraries from Apache > > * Commons CLI > > * Commons Codec > > * Commons HttpClient > > * Commons Logging > > * Velocity > > * Ant > > > > We've also contributed the Wave Gadget implementation into the Apache > > Shindig project. > > > > = Documentation = > > > > Entry point for documentation of all the specs and designs. > > http://waveprotocol.org/ > > > > Wave Robots API > > http://code.google.com/apis/wave/extensions/robots/ > > > > Wave Gadgets API > > http://code.google.com/apis/wave/extensions/gadgets/guide.html > > > > = Initial Source = > > > > The initial source will come from > > http://code.google.com/p/wave-protocol/source/browse/. This consists of > the > > Java code necessary for the client and server. These are already open > source > > repositories licensed under the Apache Public License. > > > > = Source and Intellectual Property Submission Plan = > > > > Beginning with the initial unveiling, Google published a liberal patent > > license: > > > > Subject to the terms and conditions of this License, Google and its > > affiliates hereby grant to you a perpetual, worldwide, non-exclusive, > > no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable (except as stated in this License) > > patent license for patents necessarily infringed by implementation of > this > > specification. If you institute patent litigation against any entity > > (including a cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that the > > implementation of the specification constitutes direct or contributory > > patent infringement, then any patent licenses for the specification > granted > > to you under this License shall terminate as of the date such litigation > is > > filed. > > > > http://www.waveprotocol.org/patent-license > > > > = External Dependencies = > > > > In addition to the previously mentioned Apache dependencies, the initial > > code relies on the following libraries that have Apache compatible > licenses: > > > > antlr, aopalliance, asm, bouncycastle, cglib, dom4j, emma, gson, guava, > > guice, gwt, gxp, hamcrest, jackson, jdom, jetty, jline, jmock, joda_time, > > jsr305, junit, libidn, mockito, mongo-driver, oauth, protobuf, > > protobuf-format-java, protostuff, stringtemplate, websocket, whack, xpp3 > > > > = Cryptography = > > > > We use standard crypto library methods available in java.security.*. Wave > > federation plans to uses encryption for sending deltas to remote Wave > > servers. > > > > = Required Resources = > > > > == Mailing lists == > > > > * wave-dev > > * wave-commits > > * wave-private > > > > It is possible that if the project does grown to include many sub project > > that we would split the mailing list up by sub project. Again we have > > flexibility. > > > > > > == Subversion Directory == > > > > https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/wave > > > > == Issue Tracking == > > > > Please help us setup a JIRA instance for both issue tracking and code > > review. > > > > == Other Resources == > > > > * a wiki (for the sites pages) ( > > http://incubator.apache.org/guides/sites.html or a wiki > > http://wiki.apache.org/incubator/) > > * code review on reviews.apache.org > > * a server to run a dogfood instance > > * continuous build bot > > > > = Initial Committers = > > > > * Alex North (Google) > > * Anthony Watkins (SESI) > > * Christian Ohler (Google) > > * Dan Danilatos (Google) > > * Dan Peterson (Google) / dpeter...@apache.org > > * David Hearnden (Google) > > * David Wang (Google) > > * Ian Roughley (Novell) / rough...@apache.org > > * James Purser > > * Joseph Gentle > > * Lennard de Rijk > > * Michael MacFadden (Solute) > > * Soren Lassen (Google) > > * Tad Glines > > * Torben Weis (University Duisburg-Essen) > > > > = Sponsors = > > > > == Champion == > > > > * Paul Lindner > > > > == Nominated Mentors == > > > > * Santiago Gala > > * Ben Laurie > > * Upayavira > > * Brian W. Fitzpatrick (emeritus on the Incubator PMC) > > > > == Sponsoring Entity == > > > > The Apache Incubator. > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org > >