>> this announcement is available online at https://s.apache.org/eqwI


17 years ago today, The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) incorporated with the 
mission of producing software for the public good. 

The Foundation's commitment to fostering a collaborative approach to 
development has long served as a model for producing consistently high quality 
software and helping advance the future of open development. The ASF's 
collaborative leadership, robust community, and meritocratic process serve as 
best practices widely embraced by organizations and individuals alike. 

Our success is testament to all of the developers, users, contributors, and 
enthusiasts behind Apache's products, brand, and community. We are proud to 
celebrate the innovations that continue to make it all possible and have 
highlighted 17 ways Apache has grown from strength to strength. Here's to the 
next 17 years! 

–Brett Porter, ASF Chairman, and Sally Khudairi, Vice President Marketing & 
Publicity 


1) "A Patchy" Server? 

Did you know that the name "Apache" was chosen from respect for the various 
Native American nations collectively referred to as Apache, well-known for 
their superior skills in warfare strategy and their inexhaustible endurance? It 
also makes a cute pun on "a patchy Web server" –a server made from a series of 
patches– but this was not its origin. The group of developers who released this 
new server software soon started to call themselves the "Apache Group". 21 
years after its inception, the Apache HTTP Web Server remains the most popular 
Web server on the planet. 

Learn more at http://apache.org/foundation/faq.html#name 
http://httpd.apache.org/ABOUT_APACHE.html 

2) Birth of a Foundation 

Did you know that the ASF incorporated as a membership-based, not-for-profit 
corporation in order to ensure that the Apache projects continue to exist 
beyond the participation of individual volunteers? Individuals who have 
demonstrated a commitment to collaborative open-source software development, 
through sustained participation and contributions within the Foundation's 
projects, are eligible for membership in the ASF. The ASF is governed by the 
community it most directly serves –the people collaborating within its 
projects. Today the ASF develops, stewards, and incubates more than 350 Open 
Source projects and initiatives; through its leadership, robust community, and 
meritocratic process known as the "Apache Way", the ASF has been hailed as one 
of the most successful influencers in Open Source. 

Learn more at http://apache.org/foundation/ 
http://apache.org/foundation/records/certificate.html 

3) The Apache Feather 

Did you know that the original Apache feather logo and first Website were 
developed by ASF co-founder Randy Terbush in his bedroom office in Lincoln, 
Nebraska? This was at the same time that Randy registered the apache.org domain 
(11 April 1995). He states: "As a group, having chosen the 'Apache' name, out 
of a genuine respect for Native American resourcefulness and in particular, 
Apache tribal structure … the feather being a sacred symbol to man tribes 
seemed like a natural fit. The colors represented to me this 'awakening' that 
we were experiencing with the advent of the WWW." In 2016 the ASF logo and 
feather were updated for the first time in history, while remaining true to the 
original ideal. 

Learn more at http://apache.org/foundation/press/kit/ 

4) Expansive Growth 

Did you know that the ASF has scaled 35,000% over 16 years with very limited 
resources? Beginning with an inaugural membership of 21 individuals who oversaw 
the progress of the Apache HTTP Server, the ASF has grown to 588 individual 
Members and 5,427 Committers collaborating across six continents. All 
development is done on a volunteer basis –some Committers may be paid by their 
employers for their time and code contributions, but the ASF does not pay for 
software or project oversight. 

Learn more at http://www.apache.org/foundation/how-it-works.html 

5) Committers + Members 

Did you know that the meritocratic "Contributor-Committer-Member" approach is 
the central governing process across the Apache ecosystem? Additions to the 
core Apache Group of 21 individuals grew with developers who contributed code, 
patches, or documentation. Some of these contributors were subsequently granted 
"Committer" status by the Membership, providing access to: 1) commit (write) 
directly to the code repository, 2) vote on community-related decisions, and 3) 
propose an active user for Committership. Those Committers that demonstrate 
merit in the Foundation's growth, evolution, and progress are nominated for ASF 
Membership by existing members. 

Learn more at http://www.apache.org/foundation/how-it-works.html 
http://apache.org/foundation/governance/orgchart 
http://apache.org/foundation/how-it-works.html#roles 
http://people.apache.org/phonebook.html 

6) 300+ Projects and Counting 

Did you know that 171 committees oversee 286 Apache projects, in addition to 
dozens of sub-projects and initiatives? Since its inception, the ASF has long 
been recognized as a leading source for Open Source network-server, 
network-client, and library tools that meet the demand for interoperable, 
adaptable, and sustainable solutions. From Abdera to Zookeeper, the demand for 
ASF's reliable, enterprise-grade software continues to grow dramatically across 
several categories, most notably Big Data, where the Apache Hadoop ecosystem 
dominates the marketplace. In 2015, Apache products were featured more than 400 
times in Gartner Magic Quadrant reports. 

Learn more at https://projects.apache.org/ 

7) "If it didn't happen on-list, it didn't happen." 

Did you know that all official communications at the ASF is done via mailing 
lists? These "virtual meeting rooms" where conversations happen asynchronously, 
is a general requirement for groups that are so geographically distributed to 
cover all time zones (as is the case for nearly all Apache communities). 
Building upon the transparency-oriented culture of the Apache Group, whose 
collaboration took place on email lists, millions of messages are archived on 
1,475 Apache publicly-accessible mailing lists, documenting the ASF's 
achievements over the past decade. 

Learn more at http://www.apache.org/dev/contributors.html 
http://status.apache.org/#commits 
http://www.apache.org/foundation/how-it-works.html 
http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/ 

8) Project Oversight 

Did you know that all Apache projects are overseen by a self-selected team of 
active contributors? The ASF does not lead the technical direction of Apache 
projects: Project Management Committees (PMCs) guide a Project's day-to-day 
operations, including community development and product releases. The ASF Board 
appoints a Vice President (an officer of the corporation) to serve as the Chair 
of the PMC. The primary role of a PMC Chair is administrative, including 
providing quarterly reports to the board about the health and status of their 
project; a Chair's participation carries no additional weight or influence on a 
project, with one vote on project matters just like other PMC members. 

Learn more at http://apache.org/foundation/ 
http://www.apache.org/foundation/governance/pmcs.html 
http://s.apache.org/RYD 

9) Incubating New Innovations 

Did you know that projects and communities intending to become fully-fledged 
Apache projects do so through the Apache Incubator? This includes code 
donations from external organizations as well as established projects such as 
Groovy, which became an Apache Top-Level Project in November 2015. There are 54 
projects (known as "podlings") currently undergoing development in the Apache 
Incubator and 39 initiatives in the Apache Labs innovation "sandbox" for 
testing technical concepts. An exception is Apache Zest, which has the unique 
designation as the first project to enter the ASF as a pTLP –provisional 
Top-Level Project– without entering the Apache Incubator. As part of its 
eligibility, Apache Zest had to meet the rigorous requirements of the Apache 
Maturity Model, which addresses the integrity of a project's code, copyright, 
licenses, releases, consensus building, and independence, among other qualities 
(Apache Zest became an official ASF Top-Level Project in March 2015). 

Learn more at http://incubator.apache.org/ 
http://labs.apache.org/ 
http://s.apache.org/O4p 

10) Level Playing Field 

Did you know that Apache projects must be governed independently of commercial 
influence? As a vendor-neutral, not-for-profit organization, the ASF and all 
Apache projects do not take sides, or endorse or support any particular vendor 
over other vendors. In addition, with the belief that competition is a good 
thing, the ASF does not discourage the development of "competing" products. The 
ASF's vendor-neutral collaborative environment enables third parties to pursue 
almost any for-profit or not-for-profit business model. 

Learn more at http://community.apache.org/projectIndependence.html 

11) Global Footprint 

Did you know the majority of the world's top-ranked Websites, from Google to 
Wikipedia to weibo.com, are powered by Apache? Apache products power half the 
Internet, manage exabytes of data, execute teraflops of operations, store 
billions of objects in virtually every industry, enhance the lives of countless 
users and developers worldwide, and can be found in nearly every end-user 
computing device, from laptops to tablets to mobile phones. Mission-critical 
applications in financial services, aerospace, publishing, Big Data, Cloud 
computing, mobile, government, healthcare, research, infrastructure, 
development frameworks, foundational libraries, and many other categories, 
depend on Apache software. The commercially-friendly and permissive Apache 
License and open development model are widely recognized as among the best ways 
to ensure open standards gain traction and adoption. To date, hundreds of 
thousands of software solutions have been distributed under the Apache License, 
with Web requests from within every UN-recognized nation. 

Learn more at http://apache.org/licenses/ 

12) Meritocracy in Action 

Did you know that the ASF averages 16,000 code commits each month? The ASF is 
responsible for millions of lines of code by countless contributors across the 
Open Source landscape. Apache Committers have the responsibility to the 
collective community to help create a product that will outlive the interest of 
any particular volunteer, and that the code committed should be clear enough 
that others not involved in its current development will be able to maintain 
and extend it. Additionally, Apache code Committers are responsible for helping 
to grow and maintain the health of the Apache community. 

Learn more at https://projects.apache.org/releases.html 
http://www.apache.org/dev/committers.html 

13) Events and Face-to-Face Activities 

Did you know that one of the best ways to learn about the technologies and 
projects at the ASF is to meet us in person? ApacheCon, the ASF's official 
conference series, brings developers and users together to explore key issues 
in building Open Source solutions "The Apache Way". The ASF believes in 
providing participants at all levels the chance to learn first-hand from the 
developers and experts behind our projects, software, and community, and offers 
travel assistance to select qualified candidates who would otherwise be unable 
to attend various ApacheCon events. In addition to ApacheCon, the Apache 
community at-large holds numerous events, including BarCamps, Hackathons, 
MeetUps, key signings, and more, in North America, Europe, and Asia. The next 
ApacheCon, along with Apache: Big Data, will take place 9-13 May 2016 in 
Vancouver, Canada. Join us! 

Learn more at http://apachecon.com/ 
http://apache.org/foundation/conferences.html 
http://apache.org/events/meetups.html 
http://www.apache.org/travel/ 

14) Community Over Code 

Did you know that the ASF's Community Development (ComDev) team helps newcomers 
learn about Apache projects, governance, and activities, and guides them in 
becoming part of the meritocratic, all-volunteer Apache community? "Community 
Over Code" is the cornerstone of the Foundation's core tenets, underscoring 
open collaboration amongst the ASF's 500+ Members and 5,000+ Committers through 
respectful, honest, technically-focused interaction. A key Apache community 
outreach channel is the Google Summer of Code (GSoC), where the ASF has served 
as a mentoring organization since the program's creation in 2005. Each year, 
the ASF mentors 30-45 GSoC students, providing exposure to real-world software 
and community development "The Apache Way". Countless GSoC students mentored by 
the Apache community continue to be long-term code committers on a variety of 
Apache projects, with some active program participants elected as Members of 
the ASF. 

Learn more at http://community.apache.org/ 
http://s.apache.org/AQJ 

15) Help Wanted 

Did you know that the newly-launched "Help Wanted" application can help match 
volunteers with various Apache projects and activities that are seeking 
assistance? Whilst this project is just getting started, the intent is to both 
improve the retention of eager new volunteers, as well as find ways to get some 
long-outstanding projects completed. Watch this space as we build the list: we 
look forward to your participation! 

Learn more at http://helpwanted.apache.org/ 
http://www.apache.org/dev/contributors.html 

16) Infrastructure 

Did you know that each day millions of people across the globe access the ASF's 
two dozen servers and 75 distinct hosts? The ASF's 3 continent-distributed 
Infrastructure team (comprising 10 rotating volunteers and 5 paid staff) keep 
Apache services running running 24x7x365 at near 100% uptime on an annual 
budget of less than US$5,000 per project. As the ASF is a purely virtual 
organization, it does not have offices or buildings; its only physical 
existence is the technical infrastructure that enables it to operate. 

Learn more at http://status.apache.org/ 
http://www.apache.org/dev/infrastructure.html 
http://www.apache.org/dev/ 

17) Corporate Roles + Sponsorship 

Did you know that as a United States private, 501(c)(3) non-profit charitable 
organization, the ASF is funded through tax-deductible contributions from 
corporations, foundations, and private individuals? Approximately 75% of the 
ASF's US$1M annual budget is dedicated to running critical infrastructure 
support services. In addition to accepting donations via Bitcoin, PayPal, 
Amazon, and used car program, ASF Sponsorship raises critical funds that helps 
offset day-to-day operating expenses such as bandwidth and connectivity, 
servers and hardware, legal and accounting services, brand management and 
public relations, general office expenditures, and support staff. The ASF does 
not permit corporations to participate directly in Apache project management or 
related governance activities. As the ASF is vendor neutral, participation is 
limited to individuals, irrespective of affiliation or employment status. 

Learn more at http://apache.org/foundation/sponsorship.html 
http://www.apache.org/foundation/contributing.html 
http://s.apache.org/oLh 


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