+1 from me.

Chris is also my leader in IBM some time before, He is a helpful and talkative 
man. I learn lots from him, he work so hard that I see he send out email 
shortly before even he is ill in bed.

we never forget the contribution for the nova community, nova v3 api, nova v2.1 
api nova 2.1 micro version api.

I hot he will leave in peace and won’t be worry about the review duty in heaven.
I will never forget his word when ending the scrum, “let talk it tomorrow, CU”

BR, Eli(Li Yong)Qiao

From: Alex Xu [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, April 08, 2015 5:15 PM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] In loving memory of Chris Yeoh

Feel very sad. Just few weeks ago, I still saw him active on the community. 
Really hard believe this happen such suddenly.

He was my leader in IBM and mentored me on the openstack community also, 
offered lots of help without reservation, really
learn a lot from him.  We have phone call meeting every morning before, he 
always sounds happy and enthusiastic even after
he got health problem.
May his soul rest in peace.

2015-04-08 12:49 GMT+08:00 Michael Still 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>:

It is my sad duty to inform the community that Chris Yeoh passed away this 
morning. Chris leaves behind a daughter Alyssa, aged 6, who I hope will 
remember Chris as the clever and caring person that I will remember him as. I 
haven’t had a chance to confirm with the family if they want flowers or a 
donation to a charity. As soon as I know those details I will reply to this 
email.

Chris worked on open source for a very long time, with OpenStack being just the 
most recent in a long chain of contributions. He worked tirelessly on his 
contributions to Nova, including mentoring other developers. He was dedicated 
to the cause, with a strong vision of what OpenStack could become. He even 
named his cat after the project.

Chris might be the only person to have ever sent an email to his coworkers 
explaining what his code review strategy would be after brain surgery. It takes 
phenomenal strength to carry on in the face of that kind of adversity, but 
somehow he did. Frankly, I think I would have just sat on the beach.

Chris was also a contributor to the Linux Standards Base (LSB), where he helped 
improve the consistency and interoperability between Linux distributions. He 
ran the ‘Hackfest’ programming contests for a number of years at Australia’s 
open source conference -- linux.conf.au<http://linux.conf.au>. He supported 
local Linux user groups in South Australia and Canberra, including involvement 
at installfests and speaking at local meetups. He competed in a programming 
challenge called Loki Hack, and beat out the world to win the event[1].

Alyssa’s memories of her dad need to last her a long time, so we’ve decided to 
try and collect some fond memories of Chris to help her along the way. If you 
feel comfortable doing so, please contribute a memory or two at 
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1kX-ePqAO7Cuudppwqz1cqgBXAsJx27GkdM-eCZ0c1V8/viewform

Chris was humble, helpful and honest. The OpenStack and broader Open Source 
communities are poorer for his passing.

Michael

[1] http://www.lokigames.com/hack/

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