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2004-12-07

Board meeting agenda

This is the proposed agenda for the December 7th, 2004 Board meeting to be held at 19:00 UTC in #spi on irc.spi-inc.org.

  1. Opening(
  2. Roll call
    • No regrets received
  3. President's update (John Goerzen)
  4. Treasurer's report (Jimmy Kaplowitz)
  5. Outstanding minutes (David Graham)
  6. Resolution 2004-11-08.iwj.1: GNUstep as Associated Project (Ian Jackson)
  7. New project request: OpenC++ (unclaimed) -- deferred until response received
  8. Next meeting: January 4th, 2005 (John Goerzen)

Resolutions

    
    Resolution 2004-11-08.iwj.1: GNUstep as Associated Project
    
    WHEREAS
    
    1. GNUstep is a substantial and significant Free Software project.
    
    2. The GNUstep developers would like SPI to take donations for
       purposes related to GNUstep.
    
    THE SPI BOARD RESOLVES THAT
    
    3. GNUstep is formally invited to become an SPI Associated Project,
       according to the SPI Framework for Associated Projects,
       SPI Resolution 1998-11-16.iwj.1-amended-2004-08-10.iwj.1,
       a copy of which can be found at
       http://lists.spi-inc.org/pipermail/spi-announce/2004/000091.html
    
    4. The GNUstep maintainer, Adam Fedor, is recognised by SPI as the
       current authoritative decisionmaker in the GNUstep project.
    
    5. This invitation will lapse, if not accepted, 60 days after it
       is approved by the SPI Board.
    
    Ian.
    
    ----------------------------------------
    
    
    Hello,
    
    My name is Grzegorz Jakacki, I am a team leader of OpenC++ software project
    (opencxx.sourceforge.net). OpenC++ is a mature open-source C++ program
    transformation framework, distributed under non-copyleft open-source
    license.
    
    I am writting to solicit information about possibility of winning
    support of Software in Public Interest for OpenC++.
    
    Recently I worked together with Stefan Seefeld who is a project leader
    of Synopsis,
    a project hosted at SPI. Synopsis is in part based on OpenC++, and
    recently Stefan and myself came to conclusion that the common part of
    those two could and should be factored out and extended into reusable
    library,
    nicknamed OpenC++ Core.
    
    As Synopsis is hosted at SPI it would help if OpenC++ Core could be hosted
    here too. Thus my question is how should OpenC++ Core project apply for
    hosting at SPI, what information should it provide to support
    application, and what is an expected timeframe for SPI to decide on this
    matter.
    
    Thank you
    Grzegorz
    
          

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