The Eclipse Foundation is home to the Eclipse IDE, Jakarta EE, and hundreds of open source projects, including runtimes, tools, specifications, and frameworks for cloud and edge applications, IoT, AI, automotive, systems engineering, open processor designs, and many others.
The Eclipse Foundation is an international non-profit association supported by our members, including industry leaders who value open source as a key enabler for their business strategies.
Whether you intend on contributing to Eclipse technologies that are important to your product strategy, or simply want to explore a specific innovation area with like-minded organizations, the Eclipse Foundation is the open source home for industry collaboration.
The Eclipse community consists of individual developers and organizations spanning many industries. Stay up to date on our open source community and find resources to support your journey.
The Eclipse Foundation provides our global community of individuals and organizations with a mature, scalable, and vendor-neutral environment for open source software collaboration and innovation.
The Eclipse Foundation's IP Team has been working hard to get the various agreements that we maintain between the Eclipse Foundation and community updated.
Summary of progress to date and implications of the agreement between Eclipse and Oracle on Jakarta EE and use of Java trademarks and the javax namespace.
Wednesday, April 17, 2019 - 09:40
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EclipseWeb Web
This year marks the fifth year the Eclipse IoT Working Group has asked the global IoT developer community to share their perceptions, requirements, and priorities.
As we prepare to engage in actual specification work, it's time to start thinking about changing the names of the specifications and the projects that contain their artifacts.
The Eclipse Foundation Specification Process (EFSP) provides a framework and governance model for developers engaged in the process of developing specifications.
Tuesday, February 26, 2019 - 08:30
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EclipseWeb Web
Eclipse IoT reaches three million lines of code, 41 member companies, 37 IoT projects, and 350 contributors - bringing IoT leaders together to standardize open architecture.