Dear all,

With this message I would like to inform you of an important milestone at
CERN regarding our support to KiCad development. Below you will find a more
lengthy version with some historical context and rationale, but the short
of it is that we are going to stop our donations programme
<https://cernandsocietyfoundation.cern/projects/kicad-development> and we
have started paying for a support contract with KiCad Services Corporation
<https://www.kipro-pcb.com/> (KSC). We think the donations programme is now
a bit redundant with the other two options to donate. For reference, people
can give through an account made available by <https://donate.kicad.org/>KSC
<https://donate.kicad.org/> and through the Linux Foundation
<https://crowdfunding.lfx.linuxfoundation.org/projects/kicad>. In both
cases, the use of money from donations is decided exclusively by the KiCad
project. We now believe that KiCad is at a level of features and quality
which makes it suitable for many of the PCB designs at CERN. The natural
way for us to keep supporting it is, as for other EDA/CAD tools, to pay a
commercial company to support CERN users through a dedicated group in
CERN’s IT Department. As of today, we will close our donations site and we
will use the remaining money to subcontract development tasks to KiCad lead
developers, as we have done so far.

This is an appropriate moment to thank all the KiCad community for their
impressive work and for providing such a pleasurable environment for
discussing and contributing to the enhancement of this great tool. Special
thanks also to all our donors, who have enabled us to contribute many
important features through the years, and to the CERN & Society Foundation
for their continuous support in this endeavour.

Cheers,

Javier
Longer version

The start of our contributions to KiCad was linked with our Open Hardware
strategy in the BE-CO-HT section at CERN. Discussions started in 2008
<https://www.oshwa.org/research/brief-history-of-open-source-hardware-organizations-and-definitions/>.
We had identified the lack of high-quality FOSS PCB design tools as one of
the obstacles to effectively share our designs. It took some time for
discussions to crystallise in the decision to join KiCad development. That
happened in 2011. The two main actors at CERN at that time, and for many
years after that, were Tomasz Włostowski and Maciej “Orson” Sumiński.
Together, they brought a great number of features to KiCad, and also spent
a lot of effort in the thankless task of organising, refactoring and
generally helping clean up the huge code base so as to provide a solid
foundation for future evolution. In 2013, we started a donations programme
through the CERN & Society Foundation. In-kind contributions (i.e. code by
Tom and Orson) started ramping down while we used donations to pay lead
developers outside CERN to work on new features. That scheme has been very
successful and thanks to the efforts of our friends at C&S has remained in
force until now. We organised the first EDA devroom at FOSDEM in 2015
<https://archive.fosdem.org/2015/schedule/track/electronic_design_automation/>,
and that devroom quickly became a meeting place for the KiCad development
community. I had the pleasure to coordinate it also, with slightly varying
themes, in 2016 <https://archive.fosdem.org/2016/schedule/track/eda/>, 2017
<https://archive.fosdem.org/2017/schedule/track/electronic_design_automation_eda/>,
2018 <https://archive.fosdem.org/2018/schedule/track/cad_and_open_hardware/>
and 2019
<https://archive.fosdem.org/2019/schedule/track/cad_and_open_hardware/>,
and Seth Hillbrand took over for 2020
<https://archive.fosdem.org/2020/schedule/track/open_source_computer_aided_modeling_and_design/>,
2021
<https://archive.fosdem.org/2021/schedule/track/open_source_computer_aided_modeling_and_design/>
and 2022
<https://fosdem.org/2022/schedule/track/computer_aided_modeling_and_design/>
.

Since 2011, we have directly or indirectly contributed many features to
KiCad, including a unified geometry library, the push & shove router, a new
graphics engine with GPU acceleration, a new framework for editing tools,
new footprint and symbol editors, the library browser, a redesigned DRC
engine, the inspector tool, support for differential pair and bus routing,
and many others. Our commercial support contract now includes the
possibility of paying for new features, and we have started using that
possibility, so our contributions to KiCad’s code base will continue in
that form. There are currently two KiCad lead developers affiliated with
CERN: Roberto and Tom. Their lead development activities happen outside
CERN time, but their help as KiCad experts (along with Orson’s) will be
invaluable as CERN IT and the CERN drawing office provide the tool, and PCB
design services based on it, on a more widespread and official basis.

Helping take KiCad to the point where this transition could be envisaged
has been quite a ride. We have had the chance to interact with extremely
talented and welcoming individuals. As I look back, I want to explicitly
acknowledge the initial contribution of Jean-Pierre Charras, who started
KiCad development on his own to provide his students in Grenoble with a
tool they could take home. The last time I spoke with JP, he told me KiCad
is now in good hands, and I can only agree. Thank you JP, Wayne, Seth and
the rest of the lead dev team, also past members, librarians, translators
and the whole KiCad community. We are fortunate to be part of this
collective endeavour and look forward to more exciting developments in
KiCad.

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