Mike:

I see your point.  However, you need to understand that what we're after is the
establishment of community representation.  We had to bootstrap this group in 
some way,
and the best way in our minds was to do so based on past contribution to the 
community.
In that respect, it favors significant contributors, so yes, ANL, having 
developed the
whole of the AG2 software, has significant representation.  The geographic 
representation
may be somewhat imperfect, but I think the community is represented well in 
terms of past
contribution.

As for voting, I said in my email that the board would self-maintain, so that 
the board
could direct its own evolution.  I expect the board will make its choices based 
on
activity and contribution to the community.  Making these the criteria for 
selection will
encourage community members to contribute.  We looked at other advisory boards, 
and
believe that this model is the right choice.

What we're after with the board is guidance that will satisfy the user 
community while
moving forward on collaboration research.  I believe we're well-positioned to 
make that
happen.  We really want to involve the community in development directions.  
Where before
there was no board, now there is one; it may not be perfect, but it's a good 
start.

Tom



On 05/25/05 07:12, michael j daw wrote:
> Tom,
> 
> Here's some more community contribution!
> 
> You say that "members of the group are leaders in the community and represent 
> the groups from around the world." But a quarter of its members hail from ANL 
> and there's no-one representing users in the UK or Europe (I assume Colin at 
> Glasgow is primarily there for his expertise in vic and ric). 
> 
> We at the UK Access Grid Support Centre provide services to 60-70 UK nodes 
> (and growing all the time) - wouldn't it be appropriate for us to have 
> representation? Incidentally, there's also no representation for Germany or 
> Spain, both with growing AG communities and only one representative for the 
> whole of Asia.
> 
> Is the idea that we will be able to nominate and vote for new members to 
> ensure the board is truly representative?
> 
> Mike 
> 
> PS I'm cc-ing [email protected] in the hope that someone on the board there 
> can voice my concerns through its usual channels.
> 
> 
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: [email protected] 
>>[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Tom Uram
>>Sent: 25 May 2005 03:15
>>To: [email protected]
>>Subject: [AG-TECH] Community Advisory Board
>>
>>
>>At the AG Retreat, we mentioned that a group had been formed 
>>to provide community input
>>into the Access Grid effort.  This group will help work on 
>>standardization of the APIs,
>>provide input to ANL/UC effort on issues of concern to the 
>>community, and act as a general
>>sounding board for the effort.  Members of the group are 
>>leaders in  the community and
>>represent the groups from around the world.  The goal is to 
>>give active, interested
>>parties a chance to provide input to the AG architecture and 
>>design process.  We'll refer
>>to this group as the Community Advisory Board.  Currently, 
>>the members of the group are:
>>
>>Deb Agarwal, LBL
>>Patrick Bristow, Microsoft
>>Markus Buchhorn, ANU (Australia)
>>Brian Corrie, SFU
>>JongWon Kim, KJIST (Korea)
>>Ivan Judson, ANL
>>Susanne Lefvert, UC
>>Jim Miller, inSORS
>>Eric Olson, UC
>>Colin Perkins, UGlasgow
>>Tom Uram, ANL (Chair)
>>
>>This focused group will work on advising development of the 
>>AG, maintaining
>>interoperability, ensuring stakeholders' concerns are 
>>addressed, etc.  I expect results
>>generated by this group to be made available publicly to 
>>inform the community.  Broader
>>(and possibly overlapping) development discussions will occur 
>>on the ag-dev mailing  list.
>>
>>The board will maintain itself, adding and removing members 
>>based on their involvement and
>>level of activity.  The intention is that the board represent 
>>the community, and part of
>>its charge will be to ensure that it does so effectively over time.
>>
>>If you would like to send mail to the collective group you 
>>can do so at [email protected].
>>
>>Tom
>>
>>
>>
> 
> 
> 

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