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 white paper provides important insight into why industry leaders joined forces to create Cloud DevTools and why vendor-neutral, open source software is so crucial to their efforts.
The new paper entitled “The Eclipse Cloud DevTools Ecosystem: Defining the Future of Cloud Native Software Development,” is a showcase for the working group’s vision for cloud-based application development.
As the exceptional benefits of IoT and edge computing solutions continue to spur their rapid adoption within the industrial and Enterprise sectors, it has become paramount for companies looking to utilize these technologies to understand the opportunities and challenges they may face.
All of us at the Eclipse Foundation are very proud of the fact that the many thousands of individuals who collaborate across our many channels have always communicated in a very professional, respectful, and welcoming manner.
Java frameworks are being used to build cloud applications, taking advantage of the evolution of Java specifications to support lighter-weight and distributed applications. Legacy applications can also be upgraded, as you will see in this series.
With over 200 registrants, nearly 150 live attendees, and an impressive group of speakers that delivered some fantastic sessions, you can expect to see more of these kinds of events in the future.
According to the Eclipse Foundation, iceoryx is ideal for applications that need very low latency when transmitting data, such as automotive applications, robotics, gaming, and AI.
Gain insight on the Jakarta EE Working Group's progress since last year's Jakarta EE 9 release and the direction of Jakarta EE 10 in Michael Redlich's new article.