[this announcement is also available online at http://s.apache.org/eX]

Demand for best-in-class Open Source solutions drives landmark achievements

Forest Hill, MD -–16 May 2012-– The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), 
developers, stewards, and incubators of nearly 150 Open Source projects and 
initiatives, today announced key milestones achieved in the first quarter of 
2012.

Recognized as one of the most compelling communities in Open Source for 
shepherding, developing, and incubating innovations "The Apache Way", the ASF 
is responsible for millions of lines of code overseen by an all-volunteer 
community across six continents. Apache technologies power more than half the 
Internet, petabytes of data, teraflops of operations, billions of objects, and 
enhance the lives of countless users and developers.

The record-setting first quarter marked new highs across an array of Apache 
initiatives, including Top-Level Projects, incubating innovations, sponsorship, 
individual and corporate contributions, and infrastructure. This unprecedented 
growth reinforces the broad-reaching success of the ASF's best-in-class 
software products, the power of the Apache brand, and its highly-emulated 
community development practices.

"Our landmark success can be attributed to Apache's longstanding commitment to 
providing exceptional Open Source products, each with a stable codebase and an 
active community," said ASF President Jim Jagielski. "The ASF makes it easy for 
all contributors, regardless of any affiliations, to collaborate."

Top-Level Projects: the ASF's core activities [1] involve the development of 
its Top-Level Projects (TLPs), whose day-to-day activities are overseen by a 
self-selected team of active contributors to each project. A Project Management 
Committee (PMC) guides the Project's day-to-day operations, including community 
development and product releases. As of 2002, the process for establishing new 
TLPs has been through the Apache Incubator. On occasion, a sub-project of an 
existing TLP may graduate to become a new, standalone TLP.

New TLPs graduating from the Apache Incubator in Q1 2012 are Apache Accumulo, 
Apache BVal, Apache Empire-db, Apache Gora, Apache Lucy, Apache OpenNLP, Apache 
Rave, and Apache Sqoop. This brings the total of TLPs to 104, marking the first 
time more than 100 TLPs are in active development (the ASF has had 121 TLPs in 
total; 20 have been retired to the Apache Attic).

Apache projects span Cloud computing and "Big Data" to Search and Semantics to 
application frameworks and build tools, providing the ability to meet the 
strong demand for interoperable, adaptable, ubiquitous, and sustainable Open 
Source solutions. There have been 87 new TLP software releases since January 
2012, with milestone releases from Apache Cassandra, Apache Hadoop, Apache HTTP 
Server, and Apache TomEE.

After six years in development, Big Data powerhouse Apache Hadoop released v1.0 
in January 2012, bolstering its popularity "as measured by substantial growth 
in client inquiries, dramatic rises in attendance at industry events, 
increasing financial investments, and the introduction of products from leading 
data management and data integration software vendors," according to Gartner 
Vice President Merv Adrian [2]. In addition, IDC’s Worldwide Hadoop-MapReduce 
Ecosystem Software Forecast [3] predicts market growth for Apache Hadoop and 
supporting Big Data products will exceed 60% annually. 

The ASF's flagship project, the Apache HTTP Server, remains the world’s leading 
Web server, powering an all-time record of more than 425 million websites 
globally [4], and more than 500 community-developed modules to extend its 
functionality. In addition, the Apache HTTP Server celebrated its 17th 
Anniversary with the release of v2.4 in February 2012.

Apache Incubator: Open Source innovations intending to become fully-fledged 
Apache projects, including code donations from external organizations and 
existing external projects, must enter through the Apache Incubator [5]. 
Initiatives in development at the Apache Incubator –-known as "podlings"-- 
comprise both the project’s codebase and community. There were 19 new software 
releases from Apache Incubator podlings since January 2012.

A record 51 podlings are currently undergoing incubation, including Apache 
Bloodhound, Apache Cordova (formerly Callback), Apache Flex, Apache Giraph, and 
Apache Wave. Apache OpenOffice --the leading Open Source office productivity 
suite, and ASF's first end-user-facing project-- successfully transitioned 
nearly 10 million lines of code in preparation for the release of OpenOffice 
v3.4, the first official Apache release under the auspices of The ASF. Apache 
OpenOffice v3.4 is now fully compliant under the Apache License v2, and was 
downloaded over 1 million times in its first week.

Over the past decade, 85 podlings have graduated from the Apache Incubator; 3 
projects were retired, and 27 are considered dormant. New podlings in 2012 are 
Apache CloudStack, Apache DeviceMap, and Apache Syncope.

Sponsors: as a private, 501(c)(3) non-profit charitable organization, The ASF 
is funded through tax-deductible contributions from corporations, foundations, 
and private individuals [6]. For the past six years, The ASF Sponsorship 
Program [7] has helped offset day-to-day operating expenses such as bandwidth 
and connectivity, servers and hardware, legal and accounting services, 
marketing and public relations, general office expenditures, and support staff. 
New sponsors in 2012 include Citrix (Platinum), GoDaddy (Silver), Huawei 
(Silver), and Twitter (Bronze). They join Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and 
Yahoo! at the Platinum level; AMD, Hortonworks, HP, and IBM at the Gold level; 
Basis Technology, Cloudera, Matt Mullenweg, PSW Group, and SpringSource at the 
Silver level; and AirPlus International, BlueNog, Digital Primates, FuseSource, 
Intuit, Liip AG, Lucid Imagination, Talend, Two Sigma Investments, and WANdisco 
at the Bronze level.

Apache Members and Committers: in 1999, the ASF incorporated with an inaugural 
membership of 21 individuals who oversaw the progress of the Apache HTTP 
Server. Additions to this core group grew with developers who contributed code, 
patches, or documentation. Some of these contributors were subsequently granted 
"Committer" status by the Membership [8], granting access to: commit (write) 
directly to the code repository, vote on community-related decisions, and 
propose an active user for Committership. Those Committers [9] that demonstrate 
merit in the Foundation's growth, evolution, and progress are nominated for ASF 
Membership by existing members. The meritocratic "Contributor-Committer-Member" 
approach is the central governing process [10] across the Apache ecosystem.

The ASF's 391 active Members (449 total elected; 55 emeritus, 3 deceased); will 
be voting in new ASF Members in the upcoming annual Members meeting. The 
Committership process is ongoing, with no formal nomination or election 
timeframe. There are currently 2,967 active Apache Committers.

Contributions: in order for a project to become hosted at Apache it has to be 
licensed to the ASF [11] with a grant or contributor agreement in order for the 
ASF to gain the necessary intellectual property rights for the development and 
distribution of its projects. Whist all contributors of ideas, code, or 
documentation to the ASF must sign a Contributor License Agreement (CLA), 
copyright remains with the contributor --a license for reuse is given to the 
Foundation.

  - Individuals --a signed Individual CLA (ICLA) is required before an 
individual is given commit rights to an ASF project to clearly define the terms 
under which intellectual property has been contributed, and allow the project 
to be defended should there be a legal dispute regarding its software. 251 
Individual CLAs have been signed in 2012 thus far; a total of 4,651 have been 
signed overall.

  - Corporations/Institutions –-organizations whose employees are assigned to 
work on Apache projects as part of an employment agreement may sign a Corporate 
CLA (CCLA) to contribute intellectual property via the corporation. In 
addition, every developer must also sign their own ICLA to cover any of their 
contributions as an individual that are not owned by the corporation signing 
the CCLA. Companies that have signed CCLAs include Cloudera, Facebook, 
Hortonworks, kippdata GmbH, LinkedIn, and SoundCloud. In 2012 thus far, 17 new 
Corporate CLAs have been signed, totaling 384 overall.

Software Grants: those individuals or corporations that donate a body of 
existing software or documentation to an Apache project needs to execute a 
formal Software Grant Agreement (SGA) with the ASF. Typically, this is done 
after negotiating approval with the ASF Incubator or one of the PMCs, as the 
ASF will not accept software without a viable community to support a 
collaborative project. 9 SGAs have been signed during Q1 2012, with 337 SGAs on 
file.

Community Relations: in addition to Apache Members and Committers, countless 
developers and users contribute to the growth of Apache-based activities across 
the Open Source landscape. Two of the ASF's outreach-oriented committees 
include Community Development [12], which handles initiatives such as Google 
Summer of Code (17 TLPs and 9 Podlings are currently mentoring 41 student 
projects); and Conference Planning [13], which oversees Apache-themed BarCamps 
and MeetUps, and ApacheCon, the ASF's official conference, trainings, and expo. 
2012 marks the return of ApacheCon Europe, taking place late Fall in Germany.

Infrastructure: a distributed team on two continents comprising 10 rotating 
volunteers and 4 paid staff keep the ASF infrastructure [14] of roughly two 
dozen servers and more than 75 distinct hosts --accessed by millions of people 
across the globe-- running 24x7x365. The Apache Infrastructure team has 
released 99.96GB of artifacts so far this year.

"There's no stopping the interest in Apache-led projects --from the number of 
innovations in the Incubator, to best-in-breed solutions powering 
mission-critical applications, to the widespread popularity of the Apache 
License," added Jagielski. "The Apache community at-large is driving this 
momentum by providing code, documentation, bug reports, design feedback, 
testing, evangelizing, mentoring, and more. There’s always a way to contribute!"

About The Apache Software Foundation (ASF)
Established in 1999, the all-volunteer Foundation oversees nearly one hundred 
fifty leading Open Source projects, including Apache HTTP Server — the world's 
most popular Web server software. Through the ASF's meritocratic process known 
as "The Apache Way," more than 400 individual Members and 3,500 Committers 
successfully collaborate to develop freely available enterprise-grade software, 
benefiting millions of users worldwide: thousands of software solutions are 
distributed under the Apache License; and the community actively participates 
in ASF mailing lists, mentoring initiatives, and ApacheCon, the Foundation's 
official user conference, trainings, and expo. The ASF is a US 501(3)(c) 
not-for-profit charity, funded by individual donations and corporate sponsors 
including AMD, Basis Technology, Citrix, Cloudera, Facebook, GoDaddy, Google, 
IBM, HP, Hortonworks, Huawei, Matt Mullenweg, Microsoft, PSW Group, 
SpringSource, and Yahoo!. For more information,
 visit http://www.apache.org/.

"Apache", "Apache ACE", "Apache Bloodhound", "Apache CloudStack", "Apache 
Cordova", "Apache Deltacloud", "Apache DeviceMap", "Apache Flex", "Apache 
Giraph", "Apache Hadoop", "Apache OpenOffice", "Apache Rave", "Apache Sqoop", 
"Apache Syncope", "Apache TomEE", "Apache Wave", and "ApacheCon" are trademarks 
of The Apache Software Foundation. All other brands and trademarks are the 
property of their respective owners.

Resources:
[1] Foundation Overview - http://www.apache.org/foundation/
[2] Apache Hadoop v1.0 press release - 
http://blogs.apache.org/foundation/date/20120104
[3] IDC Worldwide Hadoop-MapReduce Ecosystem Software Forecast - 
http://www.idg.com/www/pr.nsf/ByID/MBEN-8U6JAG
[4] Netcraft May 2012 Web Server Survey - 
http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2012/05/02/may-2012-web-server-survey.html
[5] Apache Incubator - http://incubator.apache.org/
[6] List of ASF Sponsors - http://www.apache.org/foundation/thanks.html
[7] ASF Sponsorship Program - http://apache.org/foundation/sponsorship.html
[8] ASF Members - http://apache.org/foundation/members.html
[9] ASF Committer Index - http://people.apache.org/committer-index.html 
[10] How the ASF Works - http://www.apache.org/foundation/how-it-works.html
[11] Apache Licenses, CLAs, and Software Grants - 
http://www.apache.org/licenses/
[12] Apache Community Development - http://community.apache.org/
[13] Apache Conferences Committee - 
http://www.apache.org/foundation/conferences.html
[14] Apache Infrastructure - http://www.apache.org/dev/infrastructure.html

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