Good luck on your next venture. Thank you for both creating and helping me
use cobbler, its an excellent tool.
-jim

On Fri, Oct 16, 2009 at 3:03 PM, Michael DeHaan <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hello everyone,
>
> With apologies to Lynyrd Skynyrd, I am not actually leaving tomorrow.
> Though I must unfortunately say I am in fact leaving Cobbler-land and
> Red Hat to persue other exciting ventures in the land of software that I
> am interested in.   I'll be around on and off throughout the end of the
> month.
>
> Folks, it has been an outstanding almost 4 years with Cobbler and
> everyone here.   I hope you have had a lot of fun.   Working with all of
> you online (and meeting folks at FudCONs, Tech Forums, BarCamps, and
> Summits) has been a fantastic experience that you just don't get most
> places.   We've had people share Cobbler with LUGs and Conferences on
> multiple continents and even write magazine articles and chapters in
> books about us.   Hundreds of folks have contributed ideas, code,
> testing, helped other users, helped market the project, and provided
> feedback.   It is almost impossible to measure the userbase (since this
> is free software), but we know it is very very large and the world would
> most certainly implode without it (ok, perhaps not, but we can
> dream?).   Everyone here on the mailing list helped make that possible
> by being a part of things.    I can't say thanks to you enough.
>
> We've achieved a lot -- Now when someone starts a new Linux job, they
> don't have to write their own automation system -- they have one on the
> shelf that they know well, and maybe even helped build.   Crazy
> complicated things like virtualization are hopefully simplified and
> annoying things like editing DHCP/DNS configurations and managing tons
> of repositories and kickstarts are hopefully made a lot faster and
> simpler.    Folks have a simple place to store their deployment
> configuration that doesn't get in their way, and have lots of different
> ways to access it.
>
> As with many other open source management frameworks, we've shown that
> it's possible to collaborate across company boundaries and share
> infrastructure.   This all can clearly carry on, and should also be the
> way more future projects like it are spawned and run ... by absorbing
> the good ideas of everyone in the user community, borrowing the features
> people have and like from their own in-house systems, and working with
> those users to build the software they want together.   Collectively you
> are smarter than any one person or group, and that is why Cobbler
> works.   The philosophy is very much "by sysadmins, for sysadmins" and
> is how we made sure Cobbler did the right thing and kept moving forward
> so fast.   Except I am not really a sysadmin, I just play one on TV :)
>
> We have also shown, I hope, that simple software works, and there is a
> need for things that make things easy.   We've kept our code simple on
> purpose -- to encourage any user to become a contributor.   As time goes
> on, I expect things to get even more simpler and to see that
> contribution expand even farther.    That is key to what we do.
>
> As I'm sure you are wondering, Cobbler will be left in good capable
> hands.     It is being taken over by not one, but several folks --
> including two frequent collaborators of mine -- Scott Henson and John
> Eckersberg from Red Hat IT.    They'll be joined by Devan Goodwin (of
> Spacewalk/Satellite fame) and Alex Wood, also of Red Hat IT.   They are
> all extremely sharp folks who care about Cobbler and community
> projects.   We are meeting next week to get things transitioned over and
> put in proper gear -- and to figure out plans for future features and
> the 2.0.X and 2.2.X roadmaps.
>
> I'd call upon everyone here to be as awesome to them as they were to me,
> and continue to share the ideas you've had with them on this list and on
> places like #cobbler.   Also, be sure to continue to help each other
> too, as you've been great at doing in the past.
>
> Again, thank you, and it has been an honor.
>
> Sincerely,
>
>
> Michael DeHaan
>
> ( contact info: michael.dehaan on gmail, http://michaeldehaan.net/ )
>
>
> ====
>
> Note 1 -- I'm not quite done  yet, so I may still respond to a few more
> emails, bug reports and such :)
>
> Note 2 -- The official home of Cobbler remains at
> http://fedorahosted.org/cobbler and the source at
> git.fedorahosted.org.   My personal github may not stay up to date
> (probably won't), so you if you have any external branches you might
> want to make sure they aren't forked off mine -- or otherwise that you
> frequently rebase off of git.fedorahosted.org.   My copy will remain in
> place though.
>
>
>
>
>
>
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>
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