The Eclipse Foundation announced today it will begin to transition its headquarters from Ottawa to Brussels as part of an effort to advance international expansion.
Mike Milinkovich, executive director of the Eclipse Foundation, said with so many open source organizations based in North America, there is a clear need for an open source organization to have a larger presence in Europe. As nearly half of the strategic members that provide funding to the Eclipse Foundation are based in Europe, it made sense for the Eclipse Foundation to take on that role.
The Eclipse Foundation is now home to 375 open source projects resulting in more than 240 million lines of code. Some of the most widely employed Eclipse Foundation projects include the Eclipse integrated development environment (IDE) and Jakarta, which is a follow-on to Java Enterprise Edition platform, previously owned by Oracle. In total, the Eclipse Foundation’s projects represent more than 13 billion Euros of investment.
In general, Milinkovich said contributions to open source projects have accelerated in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Developers who are staying home to help combat the epidemic apparently have more time to contribute to projects. The expectation is by moving to Brussels, more European developers will contribute to projects involving technologies such as internet of things (IoT) initiatives that address industrial use cases, he added.
The Eclipse Foundation plans to establish a new legal entity sometime in July, with personnel relocating or added to a Brussels office over time depending on the nature of the Eclipse project being supported, Milinkovich said.
It’s not clear to what impact being headquartered in Europe will have on open source projects, which are by their very nature global. However, Milinkovich noted most of the recent live events hosted by the Eclipse Foundation have been held in Europe. It may be a while before anyone is attending an IT conference in person, but Milinkovich noted European developers already play a major role in the Eclipse Foundation projects.
Between the Eclipse Foundation, the Linux Foundation and the OpenStack Foundation, there is no shortage of opportunities for developers to contribute to open source projects. Many of those projects count on contributions from developers who work for IT vendors that have a vested interest in a specific project. In fact, many open source projects provide a way for IT vendors to defer the cost of creating a core piece of technology that doesn’t provide differentiated value. Rather than reinvent the wheel, it makes more economic sense to share open source code with potential rivals.
Of course, it’s then up to each IT team to decide whether to employ that open source code themselves versus relying on an IT vendor to provide a curated instance of it under a support contract. Regardless, the total cost of IT would be prohibitively higher right now if it were not for the proliferation of open source software. It’s also worth noting many IT vendors that build platforms on top of open source software would be considerably less profitable.