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The Eclipse Foundation AISBL is an independent, Europe-based not-for-profit corporation that acts as a steward of the Eclipse open source software development community, with legal jurisdiction in the European Union. [1]
Eclipse Adoptium originally started as AdoptOpenJDK. AdoptOpenJDK was founded in 2017 and provided enterprises with free and open-source Java runtimes. In 2020, AdoptOpenJDK moved to the Eclipse Foundation project under the name Eclipse Adoptium. The working group produces binaries via the Eclipse Temurin project.
Xiph.Org Foundation – founded 1994 as the "Xiphophorus Company"; became a non-profit under its current name in 2003. Directly develops, and supports outside development of, multimedia-related software and formats.
The initial code for the Higgins Project [1] was written by Paul Trevithick in the summer of 2003. In 2004 the effort became part of SocialPhysics.org, a collaboration between Paul and Mary Ruddy, of Azigo Archived 2002-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, (formerly Parity Communications, Inc.), and Meristic, and John Clippinger, at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society.
VIATRA is an open-source model transformation framework based on the Eclipse Modeling Framework (EMF) and hosted by the Eclipse Foundation.. VIATRA supports the development of model transformations with specific focus on event-driven, reactive transformations, i.e., rule-based scenarios where transformations occur as reactions to certain external changes in the model.
The Eclipse Public License (EPL) is a free and open source software license most notably used for the Eclipse IDE and other projects by the Eclipse Foundation. It replaces the Common Public License (CPL) and removes certain terms relating to litigations related to patents .
Eclipse Scout is a framework for implementing multitier business applications based on the Eclipse platform. [17] Eclipse SUMO is a free and open traffic simulation toolsuite. [18] g-Eclipse provides a middleware independent framework and exemplary implementations for users, developers, and administrators accessing Computing Grids. [19]
On September 28, 2021, the OpenAtom Foundation and the Eclipse Foundation announced their intention to form a partnership to collaborate on OpenHarmony. [4]On October 26 in the same year, both partners launched the Oniro operating system, a compatible implementation of OpenHarmony based on open source [13] and aimed to be transparent, vendor-neutral, and independent system for the global ...