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If you ever wanted a home for Ghostty at the Linux Foundation for more support, we'd happily work with you and your community: https://www.linuxfoundation.org/projects/hosting



No one organization in the world funds the LF in a way that is more than 1% of the total LF revenue... it has nearly ~2000 members across the world. You can usually get some of this from the LF Annual Report: https://www.linuxfoundation.org/resources/publications/linux...


Last I checked, Keycloak has increased in activity since joining CNCF...

https://keycloak.devstats.cncf.io/d/1/activity-repository-gr...

CNCF has probably 20x the funding of the ASF and is a different organization that spends millions of dollars on security audits, events and more, you can read about it in our annual report: https://www.cncf.io/reports/cncf-annual-report-2023/

Also we actively remove/prune projects that aren't active... we will probably archive ~10 this year https://www.cncf.io/project-metrics/


I hope that OpenFeature changes the feature flagging space the same way that OpenTelemetry impacted the o11y space, we are overdue for this (in my biased opinion)


Apache isn't a silver bullet... there are plenty of Apache projects where the individuals are compromised mostly from one company and hide behind the veneer of the ASF... where they are working on the projects per their employment. Gerrymandering is definitely possible and has happened in the past, that's why you have to look at governance and ownership of the marks/build systems etc: https://www.aniszczyk.org/2019/10/08/open-source-gerrymander...

I actually prefer the approach of LF, EF or CNCF where it's transparent where folks work for and your affiliation is disclosed upfront. In the CNCF for example, we separate out technical project decisions (maintainers) from funding decisions (members). That is healthier than blending it all in one at the ASF imho and having no idea where person is working for imho.


Agreed. Red Hat isn't perfect, but when I worked there we had a few products that were CNCF under my umbrella, including a few incubator projects. Even though we had several developers working full or part time on those projects, it was always something I was meaningful of, not stacking the project board Red Hat-heavy, to not make it a defacto RH project.


After the RedHat/Hyprland fiasco, it feels like RedHat is corrupt with SJW that are focused more on polics than on actual code


Hating is a sign of success in some ways :)

In some ways, it's nice to see companies move to use mostly open source infrastructure, a lot of it coming from CNCF (https://landscape.cncf.io), ASF and other organizations out there (on top of the random things on github).


FYI there's an LF AI Landscape which basically duplicates a bit of this work

https://landscape.lfai.foundation

They have graduated levels like CNCF :)


FYI there's an LF AI Landscape which basically duplicates a bit of this work

https://landscape.lfai.foundation

Would love to collaborate with the author of this as I help run CNCF/LF landscape infrastructure.


At a quick glance, they seem significantly different. https://ai-infra.fun/ contains things like OpenAI & Anthropic under the LLM section.

I don't see that on https://landscape.lfai.foundation/. Also, I don't see a space for Code or IDE tooling the Linux Foundation page. ai-infra.fun contains TabNine and Tabby.

Would things like TabNine and Tabby make sense on the Linux Foundation one? Would love to collaborate on this!


It could! I've been pushing them to expand the LFAI landscape to be broader, I'd reach out to https://www.linkedin.com/in/ibrahimhaddad/ who owns the LFAI landscape.


Vitess is an open source and openly governed CNCF project

https://landscape.cncf.io/?selected=vitess


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