Hi,

+1

The project seems to be very interesting and we can see that there is
documentation, contribution guide...

I will be more than happy to help as a mentor.

regards,

François
fpa...@apache.org

Le 10/09/2020 à 13:05, Julian Feinauer a écrit :
> Hey,
>
> thanks for your statement Max and thats already a great start as we coannot 
> expect fresh podlings to know the apache way (at all?) as then there would be 
> no point for the incubator.
> But knowing you and your motivation and reading your statement about the team 
> makes me very confident that this could be a very smooth ride : )
>
> So, best from my side!
>
> Julian
>
> Am 10.09.20, 12:40 schrieb "Maximilian Michels" <m...@apache.org>:
>
>     I've met Matt and other folks from the Hop project more than a year ago 
>     through Beam Summit Europe. I can say that they are genuinely passionate 
>     about open-source. Initially, they were not familiar with the Apache 
>     Way, but throughout the past year, everyone has ramped up their 
>     knowledge about the ASF. You will also see that reflected in the proposal.
>
>     Hop is a great project in the sense that it adds GUI-based integration 
>     to many data processing projects at Apache. This is appealing to me 
>     because we are leveraging many of the existing projects such as Spark, 
>     Flink, Hadoop, Cassandra, Kafka, etc. The project would be a great 
>     addition to the Apache project portfolio.
>
>     This is going to be my first project as a Champion and I'm very much 
>     looking forward to guiding the project throughout the incubation process.
>
>     Please post your questions or let us know if you want to help with 
>     mentoring the project.
>
>     -Max
>
>     On 08.09.20 12:30, Matt Casters wrote:
>     > Thank you very much Kevin!
>     > 
>     > On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 12:07 PM Kevin Ratnasekera 
> <djkevincr1...@gmail.com>
>     > wrote:
>     > 
>     >> +1 ( binding ) Interesting project. Please add me as a mentor to the
>     >> project.
>     >>
>     >> On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 3:26 PM Matt Casters
>     >> <matt.cast...@neotechnology.com.invalid> wrote:
>     >>
>     >>> Hello Apache,
>     >>>
>     >>> Our community is eager to propose for Hop to join the Apache 
> Incubator.
>     >>> The Hop Orchestration Platform aims to help people with complex data 
> and
>     >>> metadata orchestration problems.
>     >>>
>     >>> Below is the complete text of the proposal but you can also find it 
> here:
>     >>> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/INCUBATOR/HopProposal
>     >>>
>     >>> Any help with respect to the incubation is appreciated including help
>     >> from
>     >>> a few more mentors to set us on the right track.  On behalf of my
>     >> community
>     >>> I'd be happy to answer any questions you might have regarding Hop.  
> Our
>     >>> thanks go out to Max, Julian and Tom for helping us set up this 
> proposal.
>     >>>
>     >>> Thanks in advance for your time!
>     >>>
>     >>> Best regards,
>     >>>
>     >>> Matt - Hop co-founder
>     >>> www.project-hop.org
>     >>> ---
>     >>>
>     >>> Abstract
>     >>> =========
>     >>> Hop is short for the Hop Orchestration Platform. Written completely in
>     >> Java
>     >>> it aims to provide a wide range of data orchestration tools, 
> including a
>     >>> visual development environment, servers, metadata analysis, auditing
>     >>> services and so on. As a platform Hop also wants to be a re-usable
>     >> library
>     >>> so that it can be easily re-used by other software.
>     >>>
>     >>> Proposal
>     >>> =========
>     >>> Hop provides all the tools to build, maintain and deploy data
>     >>> orchestration, ETL and data integration solutions. For example, Hop
>     >> allows
>     >>> you to diagram a data flow that propagates changes from a database via
>     >>> Apache Kafka to a data warehouse and deploy it as an Apache Beam
>     >> pipeline.
>     >>> The core concepts of Hop are Pipelines and Workflows.
>     >>> * Pipelines do the core data manipulation work (read, manipulate, 
> write
>     >>> data). The main items of work in pipelines are transforms. A pipeline
>     >>> consists of two or more (usually many) transforms that each perform a
>     >>> granular piece of work. The transforms in a pipeline run in parallel, 
> and
>     >>> together create a powerful data processing tool.
>     >>> * Workflows take care of the orchestration of actions: execute 
> pipelines,
>     >>> run child workflows, environment checks, preparation, problem alerting
>     >> and
>     >>> so on.
>     >>> If these terms sound familiar it’s because they are taken from the 
> Apache
>     >>> Beam and Apache Airflow projects.
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> The main components of the Hop platform are:
>     >>> * hop-gui, a visual data orchestration IDE
>     >>> * hop-run: a CLI tool to run workflows or pipelines
>     >>> * hop-config: a CLI tool to configure Hop and its components
>     >>> * hop-server: a light-weight web server to run and monitor workflows 
> and
>     >>> pipelines
>     >>> * hop-translator: a tool for translating the various parts of the Hop
>     >> tools
>     >>> (i18n).
>     >>> * hop-web: a thin client version of hop-gui for web browsers and 
> mobile
>     >>> devices
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> The cornerstone of the Hop platform is extensibility: all major
>     >> components
>     >>> of the platform are designed to be pluggable. This allows any possible
>     >>> missing functionality to be created in a short amount of time.
>     >>>
>     >>> Background
>     >>> ===========
>     >>> The Hop Orchestration Platform has its origins in the Kettle 
> community.
>     >>> Kettle got acquired by Pentaho and after Pentaho’s acquisition by 
> Hitachi
>     >>> in 2015, the community struck out to solve problems less aligned with
>     >>> Hitachi’s interests.
>     >>>
>     >>> Rationale
>     >>> ==========
>     >>> In the Hop community, we have always aimed to function as a 
> meritocracy,
>     >>> where contributions are accepted based on merit, and individuals gain
>     >>> status in the community based on their contributions (coding and
>     >>> otherwise). We’re proud to have a diverse group of people doing all 
> the
>     >>> required things in a project: development , documentation, tutorials,
>     >>> architecture, testing, graphics design and much more. Bringing the
>     >> project
>     >>> under the Apache Software Foundation would allow us to continue and 
> grow,
>     >>> but also give our users confidence about the governance, IP status, 
> and
>     >>> future of the project.
>     >>>
>     >>> ASF Preparation Phase
>     >>> ======================
>     >>> The very first goal of project Hop is to find a good way to cooperate 
> on
>     >>> the development across wide geographical, economical and social 
> spectra.
>     >> To
>     >>> make this possible real changes were needed to a codebase which is
>     >>> essentially 20 years old. Most of these changes have been tackled by 
> now.
>     >>> We think it’s fair to say that by now, Hop is a new platform even 
> though
>     >> it
>     >>> shares a common background as it partly started from the Kettle code
>     >> base.
>     >>> Here are a few of the key focus areas we’re trying to saveguard going
>     >>> forward:
>     >>> * Plugins: lightweight plugins for all major functionality. This 
> makes it
>     >>> possible to extend Hop or reduce Hop in size.  It also allows people 
> to
>     >>> implement or change functionality with minimal coding.  In other 
> words it
>     >>> makes it easier to contribute.
>     >>> * Maintain an open and responsive community where every concern, 
> feedback
>     >>> and contribution is welcome.
>     >>> * Maintain a clear focus on data orchestration user requirements, not 
> on
>     >>> “industry trends”
>     >>> * Documentation: we set up a version controlled “adoc” system with
>     >>> automated builds which is both open, controlled and reviewed.  This is
>     >>> incredibly important for every Hop user and developer.
>     >>> * Testing and stability: we want to massively increase stability by
>     >>> implementing integration tests beyond the standard Java unit testing
>     >>> because of the dynamic nature of data orchestration work.  We still 
> have
>     >> a
>     >>> long way to go.  This work will never be finished.  It’s a clear and
>     >>> important goal nevertheless.
>     >>> * Simplicity: things are complex enough.  We follow the example of
>     >> projects
>     >>> like Apache Spark and Flink and so as an example “hop-run.sh” does
>     >> exactly
>     >>> what the name says without the need to dive into documentation.  As 
> much
>     >> as
>     >>> possible we make things self-evident and will re-use existing
>     >> terminology.
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> For a list of the changes you can look at the monthly roundup which 
> was
>     >>> compiled since February 2020.  It documents to hard work of our 
> community
>     >>> so far:
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>>          http://www.project-hop.org/news/roundup-2020-02/
>     >>>          http://www.project-hop.org/news/roundup-2020-03/
>     >>>          http://www.project-hop.org/news/roundup-2020-04/
>     >>>          http://www.project-hop.org/news/roundup-2020-05/
>     >>>          http://www.project-hop.org/news/roundup-2020-06/
>     >>>          http://www.project-hop.org/news/roundup-2020-08/
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Goals
>     >>> ======
>     >>> Here are a few more details and specifics of things we still want to 
> take
>     >>> on going forward:
>     >>> * Add more plugin metadata to Transforms and Action plugins as well as
>     >>> their supported engines.  This will make it easier to refine the user
>     >>> interface and make the user experience better by giving to the point
>     >>> feedback on what operations are supported and required.  Example 
> metadata
>     >>> to add: extra version and build information, dependencies, tags and
>     >> labels
>     >>> (replacing categories), documentation links, input and output
>     >> capabilities,
>     >>> engine capabilities and so on.
>     >>> * SWT:  While the Eclipse SWT project is still supported we want to 
> make
>     >> a
>     >>> list of all the commonly used API calls and stick to those with our 
> own
>     >>> API. This will help the development of hop-web and allow us to 
> possibly
>     >>> more easily migrate to different user interfaces later on.
>     >>> * Integration testing: every transform and action should have an
>     >>> integration test before it is released to ensure quality.  Java unit
>     >>> testing has been proven to be insufficient in guarding against 
> backward
>     >>> compatibility, stability and functionality.  We need to do better.
>     >>> * Apache VFS: Hop makes extensive use of this API to handle files.  As
>     >> such
>     >>> we want to implement the various drivers for gs://, hdfs://, s3://
>     >> through
>     >>> standard Kettle plugins making it easier to choose which protocols to
>     >>> support.
>     >>> * Variables & Parameters:  make this experience more intuitive, clean 
> up
>     >>> the underlying API and add more options to the various user interfaces
>     >>> responsible for setting and passing variables and parameters.
>     >>> * Make Hop-Web an integral part of the Apache Hop project removing the
>     >> code
>     >>> duplication (fork) we’re dealing with now.  This includes the need to
>     >>> improve various user interfaces which were designed for non-web 
> clients.
>     >>> * Make best practices and governance functionality an integral part of
>     >> the
>     >>> API of the project:
>     >>>     * Data sets and unit testing (already done)
>     >>>     * Environments and lifecycle management (partly done)
>     >>>     * Git support (partly done)
>     >>>     * Auditing and lineage
>     >>>     * Software policies and enforcement thereof
>     >>>     * Configuration management (partly done)
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Current Status
>     >>> ===============
>     >>>
>     >>> Meritocracy
>     >>> ------------
>     >>> With Project Hop, we actively work to foster the existing community 
> and
>     >>> encourage community contributions. As of  September 1st 2020 we 
> received
>     >>> over 250 pull requests and have around 600 tickets in our JIRA 
> platform
>     >> (a
>     >>> lot of which were created by community members) and have active
>     >> discussions
>     >>> in our Mattermost chat platform with over 80 members.
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> The last half year we started to ask users on our chat chat server for
>     >>> specific feedback on terminology, features and so on.  It’s been a
>     >>> wonderfully positive experience to have in-depth discussions on 
> complex
>     >>> issues with industry experts. We look forward to moving these 
> discussions
>     >>> and votes to an Apache mailing list.
>     >>>
>     >>> Community
>     >>> ------------
>     >>> Hop is developed, extended and maintained by a global community of 
> users
>     >>> and developers. The Hop community is what has driven its development 
> and
>     >>> growth.
>     >>> The particular past history of Hop has led to a lot of interest for 
> the
>     >>> project and already led to a number of contributions, documentation 
> and
>     >>> translations.
>     >>>
>     >>> Core Developers
>     >>> ----------------
>     >>> We have a diverse group of core developers with people joining on a
>     >> regular
>     >>> basis.  Matt Casters, Rodrigo Haces and David Rosenblum are part time
>     >>> developers on Hop, salaried by Neo Solutions.  Bart Maertens, Hans Van
>     >>> Akelyen, Yannick Mols are part time Hop developers paid for by company
>     >>> know.bi.  Doug and Gretchen Moran were Pentaho employees but along 
> with
>     >>> Rafael Valenzuela, Dan Keeley, Jason Chu, Sergio Ramazzina and many
>     >> others
>     >>> they can be considered to be long time consultants and community 
> members
>     >>> for over a decade that joined the Hop community in the last year or 
> two.
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Alignment
>     >>> ----------
>     >>> We want to anchor and safeguard our development and community building
>     >>> efforts for the future. We strongly believe that as an Apache project
>     >> this
>     >>> can be achieved in the best possible way. The Hop project also 
> started to
>     >>> align with projects like Apache Beam, Spark and Flink in it's use of
>     >>> terminology, tools, manner of configuration and so on.  As mentioned
>     >>> elsewhere in this document Hop is a large user of other Apache 
> projects
>     >> and
>     >>> libraries and we believe that becoming an Apache project is 
> beneficial.
>     >>> Specifically for Apache Beam we believe that providing a visual 
> pipeline
>     >>> development tool can be of great value.
>     >>>
>     >>> Known Risks
>     >>> ============
>     >>> While the current code-base of Kettle on which we have started from is
>     >>> already released under the Apache Public License 2.0 proper 
> attribution
>     >>> needs to happen to Hitachi Vantara.
>     >>> We have no knowledge of existing patents on any part of the Kettle
>     >>> codebase.
>     >>> To further reduce any risk of there even being any discussion on 
> naming
>     >> the
>     >>> Hop team decided to rename the project, its tools (to be more
>     >> self-evident
>     >>> as well), the java API and even the main concepts (Transformations are
>     >> now
>     >>> called Pipelines, in line with Apache Beam naming conventions).
>     >>>
>     >>> Orphaned products
>     >>> ------------------
>     >>> There is little risk that the project will become orphaned. The list 
> of
>     >>> active developers is large, and consists of a mix of developers  who 
> have
>     >>> been working on the code for several years and recent arrivals in the
>     >>> community.
>     >>>
>     >>> Inexperience with Open Source
>     >>> ------------------------------
>     >>> The project team has a long history in open source and has 
> contributed to
>     >>> Apache licensed open source projects, mostly in the Kettle ecosystem 
> such
>     >>> as Kettle itself and the many plugins and projects surrounding it. The
>     >>> experience gained there has allowed us to quickly set up all required
>     >> build
>     >>> tools and processes.  In its fairly short history, Hop has been
>     >> advocating
>     >>> open source in all aspects of the project. Our submission to the 
> Apache
>     >>> Software Foundation is a logical extension of our commitment to open
>     >> source
>     >>> software.
>     >>>
>     >>> Licensing
>     >>> ----------
>     >>> The original source code we started from (see below) has been open 
> source
>     >>> since december 2005, initially under the Lesser GPL but since January
>     >> 2012
>     >>> all under the Apache License version 2.0. All Hop code has been 
> scanned
>     >> for
>     >>> compliance with APL 2.0. We integrated Apache Rat with our build 
> process.
>     >>>
>     >>> Heterogeneous Developers
>     >>> -------------------------
>     >>> Hop is built, developed and maintained by a global community of
>     >>> developers.  Input comes from a large group of developers and users 
> from
>     >>> all over the world.  At this moment over 7 companies contribute to Hop
>     >>> through the developers along with a list of individuals and 
> consultants.
>     >>>
>     >>> Reliance on Salaried Developers
>     >>> --------------------------------
>     >>> Hop developers are a mix of volunteers, enthusiasts and people working
>     >> for
>     >>> an employer. There is also a group of consultants who want to be 
> involved
>     >>> in Hop because it allows them to do projects with it.  They are in 
> fact
>     >> our
>     >>> most important users and developers since they provide valuable 
> feedback
>     >>> from the trenches.
>     >>>
>     >>> Relationships with Other Apache Products
>     >>> -----------------------------------------
>     >>> Hop is a heavy user of Apache software libraries.
>     >>>
>     >>> Apache Commons usage:
>     >>> * commons-beanutils
>     >>> * commons-cli
>     >>> * commons-codec
>     >>> * commons-collections
>     >>> * commons-collections4
>     >>> * commons-compiler
>     >>> * commons-compress
>     >>> * commons-configuration
>     >>> * commons-database-model
>     >>> * commons-dbcp
>     >>> * commons-digester
>     >>> * commons-el
>     >>> * commons-httpclient
>     >>> * commons-io
>     >>> * commons-lang and commons-lang3
>     >>> * commons-logging
>     >>> * commons-math and commons-math3-3.5.jar
>     >>> * commons-net
>     >>> * commons-pool
>     >>> * commons-validator
>     >>> * commons-vfs2
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Other libraries:
>     >>> * Apache Batik : for the front-end SVG drawing
>     >>> * Apache Xerces (XSLT, XML processing)
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Other usage of Apache projects related to Hop (plugins):
>     >>> * Apache Avro
>     >>> * Apache Beam w/ Apache Spark, Apache Flink, …
>     >>> * Apache Cassandra
>     >>> * Apache CouchDB
>     >>> * Apache Derby
>     >>> * Apache Flume
>     >>> * Apache Hadoop
>     >>> * Apache Hive
>     >>> * Apache Kafka
>     >>> * Apache Solr
>     >>> * Apache Subversion
>     >>> * Apache Zookeeper
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> For the build process
>     >>> * Apache Maven
>     >>> * Apache Jenkins
>     >>>
>     >>> An excessive Fascination with the Apache Brand
>     >>> -----------------------------------------------
>     >>> With this proposal we are not seeking attention or publicity. Rather, 
> we
>     >>> firmly believe in Hop, visual data pipeline development and the 
> ability
>     >> to
>     >>> treat the developed data pipelines (ETL) as software code. While the
>     >>> original Hop code has been open source for about 15 years, we believe
>     >>> putting code on GitHub can only go so far. We see the Apache 
> community,
>     >>> processes, and mission as critical for ensuring Hop is truly
>     >>> community-driven, positively impactful, and innovative open source
>     >>> software. We believe Hop is a great fit for the Apache Software
>     >> Foundation
>     >>> due to its focus on visual data processing and its relationships to
>     >>> existing ASF projects.
>     >>>
>     >>> Documentation
>     >>> ==============
>     >>> Over the years, the community has contributed extensive documentation 
> to
>     >>> wiki.pentaho.com. Over time, areas of the available information have
>     >>> become
>     >>> incomplete or outdated. Most of this documentation has been reviewed,
>     >>> updated and will be contributed to the Apache foundation with the Hop
>     >>> source code. Documentation for the extensive new functionality that 
> was
>     >>> added to Hop in recent months is being written.
>     >>> We consider documentation to be a core piece of the Hop platform and 
> will
>     >>> treat documentation as any other item of code.
>     >>>
>     >>> Initial Source
>     >>> ===============
>     >>> While there isn’t a Java class in Hop which is unchanged from its 
> origins
>     >>> we should mention we selected this source code to form the base of 
> Apache
>     >>> Kettle:
>     >>> https://github.com/pentaho/pentaho-kettle/tree/8.2.0.7-R
>     >>>
>     >>> We merged various changes from the WebSpoon fork found over here:
>     >>> https://github.com/HiromuHota/pentaho-kettle
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Various community driven Kettle plugins were written to bypass bugs, 
> slow
>     >>> down code-rot and to implement missing features.  They were were 
> merged
>     >>> into Hop from these locations:
>     >>> https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-debug-plugin (better debugging)
>     >>> https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-beam (Apache Beam support)
>     >>> https://github.com/mattcasters/pentaho-pdi-dataset (Unit Testing)
>     >>> https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-needful-things (Bug fixes &
>     >>> workarounds)
>     >>> https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-environment (Environment
>     >> management)
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> The Hop repositories are currently hosted at:
>     >>> https://github.com/project-hop/
>     >>> * Hop: source code for the Hop project
>     >>> * Hop-doc: technical documentation for the Hop project
>     >>> * Hop-website: Hop website and content repository
>     >>> * Hop-docker: Docker containers, Kubernetes
>     >>>
>     >>> Source and Intellectual Property Submission Plan
>     >>> =================================================
>     >>> The originating source code is already licensed under an Apache 2
>     >> license:
>     >>> * https://github.com/pentaho/pentaho-kettle/blob/8.2.0.7-R/LICENSE.txt
>     >>> *
>     >>>
>     >> 
> https://github.com/HiromuHota/pentaho-kettle/blob/webspoon-8.3/LICENSE.txt
>     >>> * 
> https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-debug-plugin/blob/master/LICENSE
>     >>> * https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-beam/blob/master/LICENSE
>     >>> *
>     >>>
>     >> 
> https://github.com/mattcasters/pentaho-pdi-dataset/blob/master/LICENSE.txt
>     >>> *
>     >> 
> https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-needful-things/blob/master/LICENSE
>     >>> * 
> https://github.com/mattcasters/kettle-environment/blob/master/LICENSE
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> For all contributions we have an agreement in place:
>     >>> https://cla-assistant.io/project-hop/hop
>     >>>
>     >>> External Dependencies
>     >>> ======================
>     >>> Over the course of the last year we removed non-essential 
> dependencies as
>     >>> much as possible and replaced them by interfaces and plugin types. We 
> did
>     >>> this to simplify the architecture.
>     >>> It’s important to note all external dependencies are licensed under an
>     >>> Apache 2.0 or Apache-compatible license. As we grow the Hop community 
> we
>     >>> will configure our build process to require and validate all
>     >> contributions
>     >>> and dependencies are licensed under the Apache 2.0 license or are 
> under
>     >> an
>     >>> Apache-compatible license.
>     >>>
>     >>> Cryptography
>     >>> =============
>     >>>
>     >>> Required Resources
>     >>> ===================
>     >>>
>     >>> Mailing lists
>     >>> --------------
>     >>> We currently use a mix of email and Mattermost. We will migrate our
>     >>> existing mailing lists to the following:
>     >>>
>     >>> d...@hop.incubator.apache.org
>     >>> u...@hop.incubator.apache.org
>     >>> priv...@hop.incubator.apache.org
>     >>> comm...@hop.incubator.apache.org
>     >>>
>     >>> Git Repository
>     >>> ---------------
>     >>> The Hop code is currently in git, we’d like to keep it that way. We
>     >> request
>     >>> a git repository for incubator-hop with mirroring to GitHub.
>     >>>
>     >>> Issue Tracking
>     >>> ---------------
>     >>> We request the creation of an Apache-hosted JIRA.
>     >>>
>     >>> Jira ID: HOP
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Other Resources
>     >>> ----------------
>     >>> To allow other projects to use Hop as a library we would love to 
> publish
>     >>> artifacts on a Maven server like maven.apache.org.
>     >>>
>     >>> Initial Committers
>     >>> ===================
>     >>> * Nicholas Adment <nadm...@gmail.com>
>     >>> * Hans Van Akelyen <hans.van.akel...@know.bi>
>     >>> * Lokke Bruyndonckx <lokke.bruyndon...@know.bi>
>     >>> * Matt Casters <matt.cast...@neo4j.com>
>     >>> * Jason Chu <jianjun...@gmail.com>
>     >>> * Peter Fabricius <i...@peter-fabricius.de>
>     >>> * Rodrigo Haces <rodrigo.ha...@neo4j.com>
>     >>> * Dave Henry <dshenr...@gmail.com>
>     >>> * Hiromu Hota <hiromu.h...@gmail.com>
>     >>> * Brandon Jackson <usbran...@gmail.com>
>     >>> * Dan Keeley <d...@dankeeley.co.uk>
>     >>> * Bart Maertens <bart.maert...@know.bi>
>     >>> * Yannick Mols <yannick.m...@know.bi>
>     >>> * Doug Moran <d...@dougandgretchen.com>
>     >>> * Gretchen Moran <gretc...@dougandgretchen.com>
>     >>> * Sergio Ramazzina <sergio.ramazz...@serasoft.it>
>     >>> * Maria Carina Roldan <maria.carina.rol...@gmail.com>
>     >>> * David Rosenblum <david.rosenb...@neo4j.com>
>     >>> * Rafael Valenzuela <rav...@gmail.com>
>     >>>
>     >>> Affiliations
>     >>> =============
>     >>> * Neo4J
>     >>>     * Matt Casters
>     >>>     * Rodrigo Haces
>     >>>     * David Rosenblum
>     >>> * Know.bi
>     >>>     * Bart Maertens
>     >>>     * Hans Van Akelyen
>     >>>     * Lokke Bruyndonckx
>     >>>     * Yannick Mols
>     >>> * eHealth Africa
>     >>>     * Doug & Gretchen Moran
>     >>> * Schemetrica
>     >>>     * Dave Henry
>     >>> * Beijing Auphi Data Co
>     >>>     * Jason Chu
>     >>> * Serasoft Italy
>     >>>     * Sergio Ramazzina
>     >>> * Hitachi Research
>     >>>     * Hiromu Hota
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>> Sponsors
>     >>> =========
>     >>> Champion
>     >>> ---------
>     >>> Maximilian Michels (m...@apache.org)
>     >>>
>     >>> Nominated Mentors
>     >>> ------------------
>     >>> Tom Barber (magicaltr...@apache.org)
>     >>> Julian Hyde (jh...@apache.org)
>     >>> Maximilian Michels (m...@apache.org)
>     >>>
>     >>> Sponsoring Entity
>     >>> ==================
>     >>> The Apache Incubator
>     >>>
>     >>
>     > 
>     > 
>
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