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--- On Tue, 11/30/10, Dan Peterson <dpeter...@google.com> wrote:

> From: Dan Peterson <dpeter...@google.com>
> Subject: [VOTE] Accept Wave into the incubator
> To: general@incubator.apache.org
> Cc: "wave-protocol" <wave-proto...@googlegroups.com>
> Date: Tuesday, November 30, 2010, 6:52 AM
> Hi everyone,
> 
> Please vote on the acceptance of Wave into the Apache
> incubator.
> 
> The proposal is available at: http://wiki.apache.org/incubator/WaveProposal
> (for your convenience, a snapshot is also copied below)
> 
> The earlier discussion thread can be found at:
> http://apache.markmail.org/message/3ebtccdxvipp2732?q=general%40incubator.apache.org+list:org.apache.incubator.general+order:date-backward&page=2
> 
> The vote options:
> 
> [ ] +1 Accept Wave for incubation
> [ ] +0 Don't care
> [ ] -1 Reject for the following reason:
> 
> The vote is open for 72 hours.
> 
> Thanks,
> -Dan
> 
> 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
> 
> == Trademarks ==
> 
> Google retains all rights to the trademarks "GOOGLE WAVE"
> and the wave
> design logo, neither of which will be used in the Apache
> Wave project.
> 
> = 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
>  * Upayavira
>  * Andrus Adamchik
>  * Vincent Siveton
>  * Ben Laurie
> 
> == Sponsoring Entity ==
> 
> The Apache Incubator.
> 




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