Ross Gardler
Ross Gardler (born 10 December 1969 in Dundee, Scotland), is an open source software advocate who volunteers time to many open source projects and initiatives, in particular to the Apache Software Foundation.
He has served as a VP, Director and President of the Apache Software Foundation and currently (2017) holds the title of Executive Vice President.[1] He is a committer on a number of Apache projects, though is more often seen providing community support than code. He can also be found in other projects and foundations acting as a mentor or community contributor.
Gardler's original career was as a manager and sound engineer for a well respected though "undiscovered" Dub Reggae band in Manchester, UK called C-Charge. This early music career lasted around eight years and ended with Ross selling the record label and management company he had created in order to return to formal education and study computer science in 1995.
It is during these studies that Ross first became involved in open source, initially as a user and later as a contributor where he claims that studying, using and contributing to open source software is far more educational than any of his other undertakings.[2] Upon completing his undergraduate degree he went on to study for a PhD. in the field of component based software composition. In 2003 Ross married Heidi-Marie Brannan and the newlyweds moved to Trinidad and Tobago where Ross became a lecturer at the University of the West Indies. Here he worked to bring open source into his lecture series while creating the countries first native open source project (the now defunct Burrokeet e-learning content editor). He received an IBM Innovation Award in recognition of this work in 2004.
This award enabled Ross to return to the UK with his now pregnant wife and focus on his open source contributions. He acted as the Apache Software Foundations Google Summer of Code administrator in its first few years. This work led to the creation of the Apache Community Development Project in 2009 where Gardler acted as the first Vice President of Community Development [3]. This Apache project continues to manage the foundations engagement with mentoring programs and other such activities.
In 2007 Ross and family moved to Oxford, UK where he took on the role of Manager at OSS Watch the publicly funded open source advisory service for the UK Higher and Further Education sector. In this role he focused on how openness in software development could help drive innovations in the academic sector. In 2011 he again returned to consulting work and in 2013 he and his family moved to Redmond, WA as Ross joined Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. a wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft which exists to "further advance the company’s long-standing investments in openness including interoperability, open standards and open source.".[4]
Shortly after joining Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. the Apache Software Foundation board elected Gardler to act as President[5] of the foundation. In 2015 Microsoft Open Technologies was merged[6] into Microsoft and Ross moved to a team delivering open source on Azure.
He was the founding Program Manager on the Azure Container Service which, in 2016 attracted Brendan Burns[7], a co-founder of Kubernetes as lead architect. In 2017, the container startup company Deis was acquired[8] to add significant technical strength to the team.
Throughout his work at Microsoft Ross has continued to be fully engaged with open source projects and often speaks[9] on the topic of innovation through open source at key events around the world.
References
- Apache Software Foundation Project
- Gardler on educational value of open source software engagement
- Apache Community Development Project Records
- Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc.
- Apache Software Foundation Board Minutes
- Microsoft Open Technologies Shuts Down
- Google engineer and Kubernetes founder Brendan Burns joining Microsoft Azure
- Microsoft buys software startup Deis to boost Azure cloud
- Growth in Communities Drives Success