Steering Committee
The steering committee decides the direction of Open BlueDragon, making sure all decisions, patches, features are for the good of the community.
These gentlemen need no introductions. With well known names in the CFML community we have a representative from all walks of our industry. From high performance, to massively scalable, to hosting, to standards, to community leaders, to tools developers, to language experts, we have it all here within this select group.
As part of their introductions, they were all interviewed regarding their visions for CFML and Open BlueDragon. You can read their interviews by following the links below.
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Peter Farrellpeter.farrell@openbluedragon.org — http://blog.maestropublishing.comI'm passionate about advancing open source in the CFML world. OpenBD is a key tool in an open development stack |
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Adam Haskelladam.haskell@openbluedragon.org — http://cfrant.blogspot.com/ — interview"I want the CFML language to stay true to itself and continue to grow in its own manner. Borrowing from other languages is always good as long as CFML stays true to itself, that is a big concern/focus of mine." |
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Nitainitai@openbluedragon.org — http://blog.razuna.com/ — interviewRazuna would not be what it is today without the effort of the OpenBD open source community. The performance, flexibility and scalability of OpenBD allows for any mission critical application to be deployed with confidence. |
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Jordan Michaelsjordan.michaels@openbluedragon.org — http://www.viviotech.net/ — interviewWe all know about the many benefits of CFML ... but the cost is a mental block for most folks. With an open source version of BD, I believe we can get past that mental block and make inroads where we couldn't before - and that's extremely exciting to me |
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Alex Skinneralex@openbluedragon.org — http://pixl8.co.ukThe lack of a free version of CFML has been a barrier to widespread adoption. This is where I believe OpenBD can make huge gains. CFML has always been popular and about making hard stuff easy or at least abstracted, OpenBD pushes this idea to the next level. The diverse deployment options, performance, CFML language compliance and extensions that make developers lives tons easier for me makes OpenBD very exciting. |
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Alan Williamsonalan.williamson@openbluedragon.org — http://alan.blog-city.com/ — interviewThe biggest take up will be the distribution of CF apps; both in terms of hosting and also getting smaller apps up and running without having to haul around a huge and costly commercial engine. More tags/functions and reaching into other languages/platforms (aka mobile). |
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Matt Woodwardmatt.woodward@openbluedragon.org — http://blog.mattwoodward.com — interviewI have big hopes for the open source edition of BlueDragon and what it can mean for CFML as a language. I also am a huge proponent of open source software for purely philosophical reasons, and I'd be lying if I said it hasn't caused me to re-evaluate my heavy use of CFML. |
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Andy Wuandy.wu@openbluedragon.org — http://www.andywu.co.uk/ — interviewIt frustrates me that the CFML language is often overlooked just because it can't swim in the open source pool. OpenBD excites me moving forward as we break down preconceived conceptions and show people what really can be done. |









