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<p></p>

<h3>New FreeBSD Core Team Elected</h3>

<p><b>BSD Conference, Monterey, CA, October 18, 2000</b> The FreeBSD Project
announced today the election of a new Core Team, the project's management
board.  This marks the first occasion on which the team has been selected
by means of an election among the project's developers.  Joining the Core
team as new members are Greg Lehey, Warner Losh, Mike Smith, and Robert
Watson.  Re-elected members are Satoshi Asami, David Greenman, Jordan
Hubbard, Doug Rabson, and Peter Wemm.</p>

<p>FreeBSD Project co-founder and continuing Core Team member Jordan
Hubbard expressed excitement over the results, <cite>"For the first time
since the FreeBSD project was formed, open elections have determined
the composition of its core team and set an important precedent
whereby any developer can now become part of the project's
leadership."</cite>  The new core team also well-represents FreeBSD's
diverse and highly skilled group of international developers, with
expertise ranging from RAID filesystem and device-driver development
to extensive security backgrounds.</p>

<p>New Core Team members were elected from and by the FreeBSD committers
team, the formal development staff of the FreeBSD project.  Committers
have direct access to the FreeBSD source repository, and perform the
majority of software development associated with the project.  Until this
point, the Core Team was a self-selected board providing architectural and
administrative direction.</p>

<p>This summer, the committers voted to move to a democratic model allowing
the project to adapt to the changing development requirements of the open
source operating system community.  However, with over half of the prior
Core Team re-elected from the old team, strong continuity exists.</p>

<p>Departing Core Team member Poul-Henning Kamp said, <cite>"I'm
very proud of what we have done together in the Core Team over the last
8 years.  The new Core, and the fact that they are elected by the
committers, means that the project will be much more responsive to
change in the future."</cite></p>

<p>The changing of the guard in project leadership comes amid good feelings,
Kamp indicated: all past Core members will continue on with the project
with increased emphasis on development, <cite>"Now I get to spend more time on
the FreeBSD source code instead of on project management."</cite></p>

<h3>Elected Core Team Members</h3>

<p><b>Satoshi Asami</b> is a co-founder and CTO of DecorMagic, Inc., and manages
the FreeBSD Ports Collection.</p>

<p><b>David Greenman</b> is a co-founder of the FreeBSD Project and is currently
President of TeraSolutions, Inc., a company that manufactures Internet
servers and RAID storage systems.</p>

<p><b>Jordan Hubbard</b> is a co-founder of the FreeBSD Project as well as its
public relations officer and release engineer.  He is also Vice President
for Open Source Solutions at BSDi.</p>

<p><b>Greg Lehey</b> is an Open Source Researcher with Linuxcare; he has spent
most of his professional career in Germany, where he worked for
computer manufacturers such as Univac, Tandem, and Siemens-Nixdorf.
He is the author of the Vinum volume management and RAID software for
FreeBSD, has been involved in the FreeBSD SMPng project, and is the
author of Porting Unix Software and The Complete FreeBSD.</p>

<p><b>Warner Losh</b> has been porting NetBSD's pccard code to FreeBSD and has
been FreeBSD Security Officer for the past two years.</p>

<p><b>Doug Rabson</b> is a co-founder of Qube Software Ltd., which specializes
in 3D graphics technology. His work on FreeBSD includes the alpha and
ia64 ports, and he was the main architect for FreeBSD's device driver
framework.</p>

<p><b>Mike Smith</b> is Principal Engineer in BSDi's Open Source Solutions group
and has been active in the FreeBSD developer community as a developer
resource, OEM liaison, sometime architect and device driver author.</p>

<p><b>Robert Watson</b> is a research scientist at NAI Labs, working on network
and operating system security research.  His contributions to the
FreeBSD Project include work on trusted operating system extensions
(<a href="http://www.trustedbsd.org">TrustedBSD</a>),
security architecture, and work on the security-officer team.</p>

<p><b>Peter Wemm</b> has been involved with FreeBSD since the early days of the
ISP Industry in Australia and has since relocated to the US to work as
a Software Engineer for Yahoo!, Inc.  His involvement in FreeBSD
includes management of the FreeBSD source code repository and kernel
development.</p>

<h3>About FreeBSD</h3>

<p>FreeBSD is a liberally-licensed open source operating system with its
origins in BSD Net/2 and 4.4 Lite, the Berkeley Software Distributions
developed at the University of California at Berkeley until 1994.  It
is developed and maintained by a global organization of paid and
volunteer contributors.  FreeBSD is distinguished by its high
performance networking and filesystem support, and is widely used
among Internet service providers, including industry-recognized
companies such as <b>Yahoo!</b>, <b>above.net</b>,
and <b>Verio</b>.  FreeBSD is also
frequently used as a platform for embedded networking devices,
including products from <b>IBM</b>, <b>Inktomi</b>, <b>Juniper Networks</b>,
and <b>Network Alchemy - a Nokia Company</b>.</p>

<p>More information may be found at
<a href="http://www.FreeBSD.org">http://www.FreeBSD.org/</a>.</p>

<h3>Press Contact</h3>

<p>Jordan Hubbard<br/>
The FreeBSD Project<br/>
925-682-7859<br/>
<a href="mailto:jkh@FreeBSD.org">jkh@FreeBSD.org</a></p>

<h3># # #</h3>

<p>BSD is a registered trademark of Berkeley Software Design, Inc.  Other
  trademarks are property of their respective owners.  BSD technologies were
  originally developed by the University of California, Berkeley and its
  contributors.</p>

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