Open Management Consortium Blog : January 2008

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Today at <a href="barcampesm.org">BarCampESM</a> Erik Dahl led as discussion on "The need for an open agent". After this discussion tlockney and I announced the GA of the new Open Management Consortium website, and via a "show of hands" consensus, set up a new sub=project in the monitoring community for the "OMC Open Agent" project. Erik will be leading the effort and building out the community over the next weeks. Please join in and help him out. Now, go visit the new <a href="http://openmanagement.org/community/monitoring/omc_open_agent">OMC Open Agent community</a> to learn more about this exciting project.

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BarCamp ESM Kick-Off

Posted by Mark Hinkle Jan 19, 2008

If you want to get the play by play from BarCamp today follow our Twitter feed at : http://twitter.com/barcampESM

 

BarCampESM kicked off with a roll call of the attendees. More will be coming throughout the day. These guys get credit for getting here early.

 

Instigators

 

 

 

 

The Attendees

 

 

  • Tarus Balog - Founder of the OpenNMS project

  • David Winter - Manager Services Manages - Coleman Technologies

  • Alex Horner - Control Tier Software

  • Bill Karpovich - Founder and CEO of Zenoss

  • Eric Dahl - Founder CTO of Zenoss

  • Heath Newburn - Worldwide product manager Tivoli Monitoring

  • Kartick Suriamoorthy- Community Manager Ziptie, for Alterpoint

  • Michael Nels - Alterpoint

  • Michale Cote - Analyst, RedMonk, former BMC developer

  • Doug McClure - IBM Tivoli

  • John Mick

  • Damon Edwards - Control Tier

  • NTS Solutions

  • Lee Thomas - eTrade Financial

  • Steve Carl - Manager of R&D Support, BMC Software

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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I guess this should have been posted earlier but I wanted to let you know that the Open Management Consortium Officially broke the 1000 Members mark on LinkedIN. This is exciting news, and as soon as the site goes through a little more testing tlockney and I will announce GA to that list and hopefully grow the number of conversations/participation by several orders of magnitude. While we're holding off a little on this, you should feel free to start spreading the word about this new website to people you know in the industry. So go forth and spread the word of the OMC's new website and help us make this the largest most active voice in open source systems management.

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Where's the OMC on LinkedIN?

Posted by whurley Jan 4, 2008

Hey Everyone,

 

A couple of people asked me what would be happening to the OMC on LinkedIN now that we have the new web infrastructure in place. Well, I see no reason to stop using the LinkedIN group at this point. So, we'll do everything here and if someone wants to join on LinkedIN then the join link will still be available. What's that link you ask? Excellent question:

 

http://www.linkedin.com/e/gis/2177/7B49AA043016

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Moments ago ahonor opened a discussion entitled Design patterns for software operations? which caught our eye. Here's specifically what cuaght my eye:

 

Those of you that develop software (or have in their past) are probably used to the idea of using or referring to design patterns when implementing software. One of the things great about design patterns is that they explain the problem space, analyze it and describe generic solutions that can be implemented in your application language and/or runtime of choice (ie, they are technology agnostic). It especially helps avoid re-inventing solutions.

 

Working in various software operations groups over the years it eventually seemed obvious to me that there were nascent design patterns that could be applied generally and be a source of useful knowledge. You can read more about my reasoning at the dev2ops blog: http://dev2ops.blogspot.com/2008/01/where-are-design-patterns-for-software.html

 

 

In addition to linking to his original blog post ahonor suggested that we start a workgroup within the OMC:

 

To get the idea off the ground, I would like to propose using the wiki and forums facilities of the Open Management Consortium website. We could fit the discussion under an existing group like "Open Standards" or create a new community group like "Design Patterns". The wiki plays the role of catalog and repository while the forums can be useful for hammering out ideas.

 

The process of starting a repository of patterns should initially be informal to encourage participation. As time goes on and as the number of proposals increases, we can determine a means to catalog and measure consensus.

 

I am volunteering to get things started and drive the effort. I think we would all benefit from having a resource like this and it can only help improve consistency and even interoperability!

 

Well, as you all know this is exactly how we want the OMC to operate; community lead. So we have created a new workspace under the "Open Standards" section of the website called "OMC Design Patterns". Thanks to ahonor for the idea and for volunteering to kick things off and help manage the workspace. You can link directly to the workspace (from your blog or other sites) using the following URL:

 

http://beta.openmanagement.org/community/open_standards/omc_design_patterns

 

It will be very interesting to see how much adoption this idea picks up. I for one will be participating heavily in the workspace as ahonor has a great idea/perspective that I hope others join in support of.

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