On Sun, Jan 25, 2015 at 7:48 PM, Dennis E. Hamilton <[email protected]> wrote:
> It's my birthday and it just seemed a good idea to move the needle on 
> Priority #1.  I'm rather uncomfortable about self-nomination yet I figure the 
> conversations and discussion are of value.
>
> I hereby nominate myself as the replacement for Andrea Pescetti as Apache 
> OpenOffice PMC Chair.
>

+1

-Rob

> RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE CHAIR
>   My promise, if selected, is to faithfully deliver on the responsibilities 
> of a PMC Chair as required of an Officer of the Foundation.
>
> APPROACH TO APACHE OPEN OFFICE
>
>   With regard to the PMC, which I am not a member of, my promise is to serve 
> as an effective member of that community and with particular attention to PMC 
> responsibilities to the Foundation but also to the cultivation of a 
> sustainable, thriving project.
>   As an AOO committer, my personal itch is around intake of new developers 
> and reducing the friction and learning curve that goes with that.  I am also 
> personally committed to furthering the interoperability among ODF-supporting 
> products of all kinds in whatever ways that works for Apache OpenOffice.  I 
> have been training to become more involved in the code, as slow as I am at 
> that.  I am also interested in how user support can be broadened and 
> materials brought current and highly-available.
>
> WHERE'S DENNIS BEEN?
>
> Folks who've been here since OpenOffice came to the ASF will recall that I 
> was a member of the PPMC and did not continue after graduation to a Top Level 
> Project.  On the PPMC I was an initial committer and I contributed to 
> administrative activities for some mailing lists, intake of new committers 
> and PPMC members.  I was particularly pleased to participate in the 
> preservation of the OpenOffice Forums.
>
> I have no difficulty with administrative, procedural, and policy matters.  My 
> departure was more from recognition that I was not equipped to work on the 
> code and that I did not just want to continue as an administrative resource.  
> I also left the OASIS ODF TC around the same time.
>
> Meanwhile, I engaged in some training, including in security and 
> cryptography, an interest of mine with respect to document privacy.  Last 
> year I became interested in change-tracking and I'm currently putting the 
> final touches on two workshop papers I presented last September.  I also did 
> some course-work in software development and I am continuing that.
>
> It was renewed interest in tracked changes and other aspects of ODF 
> interoperability that brought me back to following AOO lists.  My 
> participation has increased to the current level over the past few months.  I 
> also joined the Apache Corinthia Incubator as an initial committer and PPMC 
> member of that newborn podling.
>
> NO REALLY, WHERE HAS DENNIS BEEN?
>
> I wrote my first line of code when I was 19.  That was in May, 1958.  I went 
> through the usual progression of development from programmer to becoming a 
> lead developer on what we called systems software, including assemblers, 
> compilers and utilities for the machines of the time.  I also did some 
> programming-language design work.  I had the good fortune to work at Sperry 
> Univac, in Seattle, New York City, and Blue Bell Pennsylvania during the peak 
> of Grace Hopper's presence there.  Although she knew me, I did not do much 
> directly with her (although I graded papers for her once when she was 
> teaching a course in the Wharton School). Later I became a consultant, and 
> after two tours at Xerox Corporation, serving as a software architect and 
> technical-staff member, first in Rochester, New York, and finally in Palo 
> Alto, I retired at the end of 1998.  I recommend retirement as a career.
>
> I began working in industry standards when ASCII was a new-born and ALGOL 60 
> was expected to revolutionize programming.  Document formats became of 
> interest while I was at Xerox and I participated in development of consortium 
> agreements for document management.  Most of my internal work in my later 
> Xerox years was around interoperability provisions of various kinds.  I dug 
> into OOXML and ODF only after my retirement when those standardization 
> efforts were moving along.  There are words of mine in both of those 
> specifications.
>
> SO WHAT?
>
> Most of us are only acquainted on the Internet and, while I have met others 
> on AOO, those occasions are rare and fleeting.
>
> More than that, I want to offer, in my nomination, an opportunity to say what 
> doesn't work with regard to me personally.  I welcome that.  And please 
> express more of what is wanted from the Project that is not happening and how 
> any contributors are expected, not just the PMC and its Chair, to make a 
> difference with respect to the expectations this community has.
>
> I respect all feedback and discussion and I will still be here whatever the 
> outcome of this Priority #1 activity happens to be.  I am not attached to 
> being PMC Chair.  I am offering to take on those duties as a means for us to 
> move forward onto other priority challenges for the Project.
>
>
>  -- Dennis E. Hamilton
>     [email protected]
>     [email protected]    +1-206-779-9430
>     https://keybase.io/orcmid  PGP F96E 89FF D456 628A
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