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<boardmember id="andersen" type=" addin">
<name>Max Rydahl Andersen</name>
<title>Consulting Engineer at Red Hat</title>
<image>andersen.jpg</image>
<email>manderse@redhat.com</email>
<eclipse_affiliation> <![CDATA[
M2E-WTP committer, retired Dali committer
]]> </eclipse_affiliation>
<vision> <![CDATA[
<p>Eclipse has been around for 10+ years. It gained its fame by
providing an IDE that was not only just open source but heaps
and bounds better than at the time competition.</p>
<p>Over the years the Eclipse IDE gained massive momentum and
from that the Eclipse Community has grown stronger and larger and
into other areas than just the IDE.</p>
<p>This Eclipse Community which goes beyond the IDE is doing very
well and I think Eclipse is gaining a very strong presence
and has a bright future to be a home for building open source
ecosystems.</p>
<p>But the Eclipse IDE work is stagnating.</p>
<p>Today, many commercial and open source vendors base their own IDE
on the tooling ecosystem provided by the efforts done at
Eclipse - but they tend to more and more build on top of
the IDE; they do not contribute directly to maintain and
keep the Eclipse IDE competitive or even simply just
alive. Some are not aware that they can or should contribute,
some try but get met with a deafening silence or overwhelming
amout of work to make their contribution happen.</p>
<p>If this trend continues the Eclipse IDE will not survive.</p>
<p>There are new and ongoing work at Eclipse to make a new IDE -
an IDE that is built on webbased technology (Eclipse Cloud
Development project), but it will take years with the current speed
before it will reach the level of maturity Eclipse had 10
years ago.</p>
<p>That said the IT industry is moving towards heterogeneous
development environments. My belief is that both the
traditional desktop based IDE and the upcoming
web/html5/cloud based IDE's will play a part for many years
going forward. Hopefully in a way that makes these play well
together.</p>
<p>Unfortunately getting contributions and work on these IDE's
are a challenge.</p>
<p>I believe there are many past and future contributions that
are being held back because resources have moved away from
Eclipse IDE projects to other projects.</p>
<p>We need to bridge these gaps of resources.</p>
<p>Based on those observations, my focus on the board will
continue to be:</p>
<p> a) working on finding a way to get the companies and individuals that
already have invested in Eclipse IDE to understand the importance of contributing to the Eclipse
IDE platform.</p>
<p>b) Remove the technical and organizational barriers in
projects that prevent contributions from making it into Eclipse.</p>
<p>c) encourage and support projects that help build bridges between the
Eclipse IDE, Orion, Che and other IDE's </p>
<p>d) work on identifying projects or pieces of projects that
could be dropped or changed to reduce complexity and make other
contributions possible.</p>
<p>In short - continue to keep the tooling platforms that have been built
and will be built at Eclipse.org alive and viable for years
to come.</p>
]]> </vision>
<bio> <![CDATA[Max Rydahl Andersen is leading the development
of JBoss Tools and Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio and have
several years working with Eclipse from both outside and
inside of eclipse.org. His main interests for Eclipse.org is
to keep the Eclipse IDE a viable platform for building desktop
based tooling while also getting involved in offering a
complementary cloud
and web-based tooling offering.
]]> </bio>
<affiliation> <![CDATA[
Red Hat
]]>
</affiliation>
</boardmember>