O'Reilly Open Source Award
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The
The O'Reilly Open Source Awards | |
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Awarded for | "individuals recognized for dedication, innovation, leadership and outstanding contribution to open source."[3] |
Presented by | O'Reilly Media |
First awarded | 2005 |
Website | code |
Award winners
This is a list of the winners of individuals that won the annual O'Reilly Open Source Awards.
2005
- Best Communicator: Doc Searls (co-author of "The Cluetrain Manifesto" and Senior Editor for Linux Journal)
- Best Evangelist: Gnome desktopenvironment)
- Best Diplomat: Geir Magnusson Jr
- Best Integrator: D. Richard Hipp (SQLite)
- Best Hacker: 37Signals)
2006
- Best Legal Eagle: Cliff Schmidt (Apache License)
- Best Community Activist: Gervase Markham (programmer) (Firefox)
- Best Toolmaker: Julian Seward (Valgrind)
- Best Corporate Liaison: Stefan Taxhet (OpenOffice.org)
- Best All-around Developer: Peter Lundblad (Subversion)
2007
- Best Community Builder: Karl Fogel
- Best FUD Fighter: Pamela Jones
- Best Accessibility Architect: Aaron Leventhal
- Best Strategist: David Recordon
- Best Outstanding Lifetime Contributions: Paul Vixie
2008
- Best Community Amplifier: Microformats and Spread Firefox
- Best Contributor: Angela Byron - Drupal
- Best Education Enabler: Martin Dougiamas - Moodle
- Best Interoperator: Andrew Tridgell - Samba and Rsync
- Defender of Rights: Harald Welte - gpl-violations.org
2009
- Best Open Source Database Hacker: Brian Aker - Drizzle and MySQL
- Database Jedi Master: Bruce Momjian - PostgreSQL
- Best Community Builder: Sunlight Labs
- Best Social Networking Hacker: Laconica
- Best Education Hacker: Penny Leach - Mahara and Moodle
2010
- Jeremy Allison - Samba
- Deborah Bryant
- Brad Fitzpatrick - memcached, Gearman, MogileFS, and OpenID
- Summer of Code
- Greg Stein - Subversion, Apache, Python[4]
2011
- Fabrice Bellard - QEMU, FFmpeg
- SFLC, licensing
- Keith Packard - X Window System
- Ryan Dahl - Node.js
- Kohsuke Kawaguchi - Jenkins[5]
2012
- Massimo Banzi
- Jim Jagielski
- Christie Koehler
- Bradley M. Kuhn
- Elizabeth Krumbach[6]
2013
- Behdad Esfahbod - HarfBuzz
- Jessica McKellar - Python Software Foundation
- Limor Fried - Adafruit Industries
- Valerie Aurora - Ada Initiative
- Paul Fenwick - Perl
- Martin Michlmayr - Debian Project[7]
2014
- Sage Weil - Ceph
- Deb Nicholson - MediaGoblin and OpenHatch.org
- John "Warthog9" Hawley - gitweb and Linux kernel site kernel.org
- Erin Petersen - Outercurve Foundation and Girl Develop It
- Slackware Linux[8]
2015
2016
2017
- William John Sullivan, Executive Director, Free Software Foundation.
- Nithya Ruff, Head of Open Source Program Office at Amazon, Linux Foundation, Boards of Directors.
- Tony Sebro, General Counsel, Software Freedom Conservancy; Outreachy coordinator.
- Katie McLaughlin, BeeWare / KatieConf.
- Juan González Gómez, R&D Engineer & Member of the CloneWars and FPGAwars communities[11]
2018
In 2018 the winner of each award was determined through open voting from nominees selected by O'Reilly.[12]
- Most Impact Award: Kubernetes
- Breakout Project of the Year: HashiCorp - Vault
- Lifetime Achievement Award: Linux[13]
2019
- Most Impact Award: Let's Encrypt[14]
- Breakout Project of the Year: Kotlin[15]
- Lifetime Achievement Award: PostgreSQL
See also
References
- ^ O'Reilly Open Source Awards 2010
- ^ Google-O'Reilly Open Source Awards - Hall of Fame
- ^ "Google-O'Reilly Open Source Awards - Hall of Fame". Retrieved 2011-09-17.
- ^ "O'Reilly Open Source Awards 2010". Retrieved 2011-09-17.
- ^ "OSCON 2011: O'Reilly Open Source Awards". 2011-07-28.
- ^ "OSCON 2012: O'Reilly Open Source Awards". Retrieved 2012-07-20.
- ^ "O'Reilly Open Source Awards: OSCON 2013". 2013-07-26.
- ^ "O'Reilly Open Source Awards - OSCON 2014". YouTube. O'Reilly. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
- ^ "O'Reilly Open Source Awards - OSCON 2015". YouTube. O'Reilly. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
- ^ "O'Reilly Open Source Awards - OSCON 2016". OSCON. O'Reilly. 19 May 2016. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
- ^ "2017 O'Reilly Open Source and Frank Willison Awards". OSCON. O'Reilly. 11 May 2017. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
- ^ Roumeliotis, Rachel (6 June 2018). "OSCON 2018 Open Source Awards". Medium. Retrieved 25 March 2019.
- ^ "O'Reilly Open Source Awards 2018". OSCON. O'Reilly. 19 July 2018. Retrieved 25 March 2019.
- ^ "O'Reilly Open Source and Frank Willison Awards 2019". O'Reilly Open Source Convention. 2019-07-18. Retrieved 2021-02-27.
- ^ "Kotlin wins Breakout Project of the Year award at OSCON '19". blog.jetbrains.com. JetBrains. Retrieved 10 November 2019.