June 1st, 2004 — phpcollab
Dear phpC Community:
During the last year I have greatly enjoyed being the project manager of phpCollab and feel that we have helped keep the project rolling and even improving despite numerous setbacks. Unfortunately, my other commitments – namely those outside technology and software – are making it more and more difficult for me to focus on phpCollab’s expanding requirements. Therefore, phpC will need to find someone who can give his or her full attention to the team and the application. The current development lead, Fullo, has been doing most of the support and development work as well as coordinating other developers and he needs a strong PM to help delegate, organize, and forge the next revolution of the product.
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May 30th, 2004 — phpcollab
Gunnar Andersson will have a talk about PHPCollab as a educational tool will be presented on the IADAT international conference.
A study on project based learning using phpcollab in a distributed environment.
for more info:
International Association for the Development of Advances in Technology -IADAT
IADAT-e2004 International Conference on Education
Bilbao (SPAIN), July 7-9, 2004
www.iadat.org/iadate2004/index.htm
March 24th, 2004 — news
Yesterday I attended the first ever “Penguin Day” in Philadelphia. This one-day conference, piggy-backing on the larger NTEN Non-Profit Technology Conference, discussed issues (mostly) surrounding non-profit organizations’ use of open source software and the future of FOSS in the NPO world. One of our main mods developers was also on hand both to represent phpCollab at this conference and see how phpC might function better for non-traditional clients.
I think that the misconceptions and myths surrounding open source application development and the animosity directed at developers suprised us both a little. I did my best to dispel the stereotype that open source projects are a lot of low level pieces of software, like compilers, on which a few super geeks work in their spare time. And I believe that I received a positive response to my remarks on the nature of new open source business applications like phpCollab that have enterprise-level applicability and a higher degree of development team organization.
What I have taken away from the conference is that the number one reason that NPO’s have not widely adopted open source software is not because they do not understand technology but because we have not sufficiently evangelized open source to them and made the wide panoply of applications available in a transparent manner. Also, something I had not really considered much in the past, phpCollab has a use in the non-profit world and with some modifications, could work for many organizations doing significant projects that require management tracking, scheduling, and project collaboration.
Although the phpCollab team will be working on finishing and releasing 2.5, updating the documentation for the new release, and moving our forum and information to a new host in the next few weeks, I encourage those of you who do work for NPO/NGO’s to discuss how phpC can work in this arena. The alliance between NPO’s and open source is both natural and, I think, paramount for both sides of the equation.
If you are interested in this topic, please post your comments here.
For more information on the conference, see the official site.
February 2nd, 2004 — news
Folks –
2.5 development is proceeding slowly but surely. To help us deliver this product as quickly as possible, please send us an email through php-collab.com and let us know if you can commit (and how much time) to getting 2.5 out the door.
If you cannot donate your time to this project, please consider donating through sourceforge donations. Donations will help us defray our hosting costs and will also go to the major developers and leaders of this project.
Donate to phpCollab!
Thanks and keep checking this site for updates!