The Open Source Applications Foundation has announced a major funding and personnel
shakeup, including that Lotus Development founder Mitchell Kapor will begin to
phase out his involvement and investment in the nonprofit organization, which
he founded in 2001.
"Strategically, we find ourselves at a crossroads," OSAF's general
manager, Katie Capps Parlante, said in a blog
post.
"OSAF has been primarily funded by one person up to this point, Mitch
Kapor. Our goal going forward is to modify our organization and our funding
model to grow into a publicly supported community project, not propelled by
one individual," Parlante wrote.
Parlante said moving forward, OSAF's paid staff headcount will be cut by roughly
two-thirds, going from 27 to 10.
"I will be leading the next phase of the project, and Mitch will be winding
down his role on the project. Mitch will provide transitional financial assistance
to support the organization through 2008. Mitch will step down from the board,
and I will replace him," she added.
In September, OSAF shipped a preview
of its Chandler group collaboration software, which includes Chandler Desktop,
Chandler Server and Chandler Hub, a Web application. The software lets users
share information, such as calendars and tasks.
The release was a long time coming for a project once dubbed
an "Outlook killer." Its rocky development process became fodder
for a recent book, "Dreaming
in Code."
"I would say I had a lot of ambitions that we wound up, for very good
and practical reasons, scaling back on," Kapor said in an interview Thursday.
He described the outcome as "a working subset of a grand vision."
Kapor said his interest in continuing waned. "We found ourselves in the
situation that the team wanted to continue on very much," he added. "I
found myself in a different place. I did not have that same level of commitment
and desire, because I had the original dream in mind."
Kapor said the saga has proven to be a "huge learning experience"
for him. "It's been a mixture of many different emotions. I would say it
would be unfair to single out disappointment as a leading factor [in withdrawing
my support]," he said.
"It felt like the right thing to do is provide this transitional support
but now it has to find its own way, and its own funding. I've chosen to decouple
from it but I think Katie and the team have a real shot," Kapor added.
Kapor's pending departure prompted a head-shaking eulogy from Web developer
Hank Williams, who had been active in the project.
"From my perspective, Chandler was a rudderless ship. I tried to make
suggestions which, though small, I felt could greatly reduce the complexity
of the product. But their design process seemed to be insular and, honestly,
broken," Williams said
on his blog. "The failure of Chandler is sad. But indeed after six
years with no viable product or even strategy, it is finally time to die."
In an interview Thursday, Parlante said OSAF intended to wean itself off Kapor's
support all along.
"I don't think the project has any animosity toward Mitch," she added.
"I just think through the next execution phase, he's going to be spending
his energy on projects that are in an earlier phase. ... I am not unhappy and
this is the right decision. It's a mutual decision between the two of us."
Parlante said she expects OSAF to be funded through a mixture of sources, including
grants, partnerships and contributions.
She expressed confidence in the Chandler project's future: "We have something
usable now. The user base is growing. At the end of the day we should be judged
on the project we deliver ... We're not there yet, but there's a lot of promise,
and I think we're going to make it."
Kapor seconded the notion. "Don't forget, Mozilla's obituary was written
in 48-point type over and over again during the period before Firefox. I don't
see any of those people coming back and eating crow," he said.