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Organization |
The FOSSi Foundation is
registered as a
not-for-profit in the UK (as a Community Interest Company). The
foundation is formed by the members and backed by sponsors.
At the formation meeting we have appointed five directors in our first
board of directors, along with a secretary. For our first year we have
defined the projects to bring forward the goals
formulated in our manifesto. We have set up
committees to structure the progress of our projects,
mainly the LibreCores committee and the ORCONF committee.
If you are interested to become a part of the FOSSi Foundation and
help us reaching our goals, please don't hesitate to
get in touch with us.
Julius' involvement with free and open source semiconductor design began with
his work as part of the OpenRISC community in 2008. After initial technical
contributions, he's since focused on promoting greater community coordination,
finding a solution for copyleft semiconductor design licensing, and encouraging
greater uptake of the technology by the wider semiconductor industry.
Peter has always been involved with open source and made spreading
the adoption of open software, hardware and silicon lay at the
foundations of Antmicro back in 2009. A member of the RISC-V
Foundation's Technical Committee, he is also active in CHIPS
Alliance, the Linux Foundation and the Zephyr Project.
Everybody just calls him Frank. He has been actively involved with open source hardware through the PULP project since its start in 2013 and has been working within academic environments for more than 25 years
Olof became actively involved with free and open source silicon through the OpenRISC project in 2011. He has since then worked in many areas with a special interest in tools and collaborations. Also known as the maintainer of the
FuseSoc IP core package manager - a tool for collaborations.
A long-time free and open source veteran, Philipp has been involved in various projects over the last decade. With interests from web development to hardware architectures, he loves to bring together different communities and approaches.
Stefan is a curious developer and has been involved in the OpenRISC
project for many years and is contributor and maintainer of
several free and open source projects around SoC design. He is
professor at Munich University of Applied Sciences.
Simon has keen interests in open source hardware and software. He
maintains the AAP project, an open source processor designed to
improve software tooling for all hardware architectures.
Andrew Back is convener for the UK Open Source Hardware User Group
and co-organises the annual Wuthering Bytes technology
festival. He is a long time proponent of open source hardware,
with a keen interest in licensing and community building.
- Chaired by: Philipp Wagner
- Oleg Nenashev, Jenkins Project
- Elias Kouskoumvekakis
- Chaired by: Olof Kindgren & Julius Baxter
- Alex Bradbury, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
- Davide Rossi, Università di Bologna, Italy
- Chaired by: Stefan Wallentowitz & Julius Baxter
- Andrew Back, ABOpen and FOSSi Foundation
- Ben Hilburn, GNURadio
- Javier Serrano, CERN
- Josh Triplett
- Chaired by: Julius Baxter & Stefan Wallentowitz
- Michael Gielda, Antmicro
- Andrew Back, ABOpen and FOSSi Foundation