The time has come for you to choose who will fill the eight community seats on the Board (ballot links went out Sunday evening CST). I’ve had the privilege to serve you in that capacity for 16 months and would like to continue. I have leadership role in Core Definition and want to continue that work.
Here are some of the reasons that I am a strong board member:
- Proven & Active Leadership on Board – I have been very active and vocal representing the community on the Board. In addition to my committed leadership in Core Definition, I have played important roles shaping the Gold Member grooming process and trying to adjust our election process. I am an outspoken yet pragmatic voice for the community in board meetings.
- Technical Leader but not on the TC – The Board needs members who are technical yet detached from the individual projects enough to represent outside and contrasting views.
- Strong User Voice – As the senior OpenStack technologist at Dell, I have broad reach in Dell and RedHat partnership with exposure to a truly broad and deep part of the community. This makes me highly accessible to a lot of people both in and entering the community.
- Operations Leadership – Dell was an early leader in OpenStack Operations (via OpenCrowbar) and continues to advocate strongly for key readiness activities like upgrade and high availability. In addition, I’ve led the effort to converge advanced cookbooks from the OpenCrowbar project into the OpenStack StackForge upstreams. This is not a trivial effort but the right investment to make for our community.
- And there’s more… you can read about my previous Board history in my 2012 and 2013 “why vote for me” posts or my general OpenStack comments.
And now a plea to vote for other candidates too!
I had hoped that we could change the election process to limit blind corporate affinity voting; however, the board was not able to make this change without a more complex set of bylaws changes. Based on the diversity and size of OpenStack community, I hope that this issue may no longer be a concern. Even so, I strongly believe that the best outcome for the OpenStack Board is to have voters look beyond corporate affiliation and consider a range of factors including business vs. technical balance, open source experience, community exposure, and ability to dedicate time to OpenStack.
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