Hi all,

Here are a few things that might be useful to know about me:

My history with Qt starts in the late 1990s when I was working as a student 
assistant for Fraunhofer in Rostock, Germany. I was putting a few dialogs 
together with some Qt 1.x version, sent my first and only question to 
[email protected], and got a response from one of the early Trolls that I’d 
better start reading the documentation. In 2000 I discovered that Trolltech was 
looking for someone doing support, so I landed an internship in Oslo as the 
first support engineer, helping customers that sometimes also didn't read the 
documentation. I didn't finish my CS degree and instead became responsible for 
the Trolltech support organisation, maintained the Windows port of Qt, and 
developed ActiveQt as well as several Qt Solutions.

Durning the Nokia years I moved into a programme management role, coordinating 
the development of Qt with several of the mobile phone programmes, such as the 
N9. I left Nokia - and the Qt community - in 2011, joined a configuration 
management startup in Oslo, freelanced as a continuous delivery consultant for 
a bit, and ended up as the VP of Engineering with a mobile network operator. I 
didn’t get to use C++ a lot in those years, but being part of a failing 
startup, and of a team building and operating systems for 200 million users 
have nevertheless been useful experiences.

Since October 2018 I have been back with Qt and with The Qt Company in Oslo. 
Today I’m leading the Graphics & UI teams in Oslo and Oulu. During the last 
years, one of the bigger changes in how we work in the Qt project was the move 
from a forward-merging to today's cherry-picking process, which I had no small 
part in during the discussions at the Qt Contributors Summit in 2019. Recently, 
I’ve been working on the port of Qt TextToSpeech to Qt 6, and otherwise try to 
make small, incremental improvements and fixes.

I thoroughly enjoy working on and with Qt, and I want that future generations 
of developers also have fun when they build software with it. I enjoy 
facilitating, coordinating, and supporting as much as designing and coding. 
This is what I like about my job in the company, and this is how I interpret 
the role of the Chief Maintainer. Knowing that Qt is awesome technology built 
by amazing people is what motivated me most to accept the nomination.

In the short term, I would like to make sure that we follow up on the decisions 
and proposals from the upcoming Qt Contributors Summit. In the mid term, I 
believe that we need a general technical direction and roadmap that takes us 
beyond Qt 6.5, and I would like to work on that with the Maintainers, the KDE 
community, and other key projects. And I believe that we can and should be more 
open, inclusive, and engaging with the development of Qt, and that we in The Qt 
Company have a special role to play in that respect.

I’m looking forward to working with you all, and especially with Allan, no 
matter the outcome of the vote.


Cheers,
Volker



> On 2 Jun 2022, at 11:46, Lars Knoll <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> The nomination period for the Qt Chief Maintainer election ended yesterday 
> night. 
> 
> I’m very happy to say that we have two excellent candidates for the position 
> with Allan and Volker. Both have been working with Qt for many years and know 
> it extremely well. I am certain that whoever of the two will get elected will 
> be doing a very good job, so I know already now that Qt will be in very good 
> hands moving forward.
> 
> But since not all of you might know Volker and Allan very well, I’ve asked 
> them to send an email presenting themselves and what they consider important 
> for Qt and the role of the Chief Maintainer moving forward. So you will get a 
> bit more of an impression from them during the day.
> 
> Elections will run from 3rd of June (starting at midnight CEST), until the 
> end of the 16th of June (23:59 CEST). Everybody that is part of the 
> Maintainer group on Gerrit 
> (https://codereview.qt-project.org/admin/groups/a60ed457f6e3833c81023c72743ba73c7e23fb09,members)
>  is eligible to cast a vote.
> 
> Daniel will follow up with more details on how to cast your vote a bit later 
> today.
> 
> With that, I’d like to wish both candidates good luck, and am very much 
> looking forward to see who will become our new Chief Maintainer.
> 
> Cheers,
> Lars
> 
> _______________________________________________
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> [email protected]
> https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/development

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