SDV Working Group: Highlights from a Successful 2023
2023 concludes the first full year of the Eclipse SDV Working Group. It was an active year with new members, projects, events, and working group operations.
2023 concludes the first full year of the Eclipse SDV Working Group. It was an active year with new members, projects, events, and working group operations.
Our final newsletter of 2023 looks at supply chain security updates and news from Sparkplug, as well as information about a recently established working group and details about our upcoming flagship event.
Donald Raab reflects on the upcoming twentieth anniversary of the Eclipse Collections project in his latest blog.
FEDERATE works towards a common SDV program vision and creates coordinated advice for current and future projects in the SDV program.
We are thrilled to announce a landmark achievement in the evolution of Theia: full compatibility with the Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extension API, marking a significant milestone in the journey of Theia towards becoming a universally adaptable development environment.
The best way to understand what joining an industry collaboration can do for your organisation is by taking a look at some of our current collaborations. Our industry collaborations program director Sharon Corbett explains in her latest blog.
The project aims to enhance the global competitiveness of the automotive and semiconductor industries in delivering Software-Defined Vehicles of the Future.
Eclipse Foundation head of security Mikaël Barbero discusses the foundation's commitment to two-factor authentication in his latest blog post.
Marta Rybczynska discusses the changes to the Eclipse Foundation's process for tracking security issues that took effect in 2023.
The Eclipse Foundation is delighted to announce that members of the SDV Working Group will upgrade their involvement from Supporting Member to Participant.
Our VP of ecosystem development Michael Plagge discusses the new Eclipse Dataspace Working Group and the role of open source in building a new reality for data sharing.
Find out how you can start collaborating with industry peers at the Eclipse Foundation in this blog from Sharon Corbett, our industry collaborations program director.
This week, Accenture was hosting the Eclipse Software Defined Vehicle hackathon at its Munich office. 15 teams worked on new business and tech solutions, based on the foundations of the SDV working group.
As a global concern, the Eclipse Foundation has a stake in improving security wherever its projects and people contribute to the software ecosystem. Review our recommendations to the US government's interest in securing and sustaining open source software.
Get introduced to two dynamic Eclipse Software Defined Vehicle projects, Eclipse Ankaios and Eclipse BlueChi, in our latest newsletter.
Amazon’s membership demonstrates its commitment to the automotive and transportation industries, including how open source software and standards can help support these sectors.
With a great turnout and enthusiasm, the Eclipse SDV Hackathon began today, November 28, at Accenture in Munich. The event includes over 30 hours of coding, with 75 participants divided into 20+ teams of 3-5 people each.
The diverse landscape of devices and protocols often results in fragmented systems that are challenging to manage and scale. Open standards emerge as a beacon of hope.
With Eclipse Foundation as the new home, Azure RTOS becomes Eclipse ThreadX – a comprehensive embedded development suite including a small but powerful real-time operating system that provides reliable, ultra-fast performance for resource-constrained devices.
The conference focuses on presenting new and unique results in the field of mobility simulation and modelling using openly available tools and data. We expect a large variety of research topics and usage approaches. If you are working on a research project fitting the topics below, you are kindly invited to submit an abstract.